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1 | 2 interview WIE: In your film The Devil's Advocate, Al Pacino plays the role of the devil. What is his character meant to represent? Is Satan a metaphor, or is he real? Who or what is the devil that you were trying to depict? TAYLOR HACKFORD: The whole concept of the devil is a metaphor on one level. And I think what was of particular interest to me in making this film is that whether we call it "God" and the "devil" or we call it "good" and "evil," I believe that they're both inside mankind, and that you make your own choices. It's very clearly stated in the film: You make your own choices, and what you're always fighting is ego. What you're always fighting is narcissism. What's different now from when Walter Huston did The Devil and Daniel Webster? Well, there are some things that are different. You're now, as we say in the film, "fiber-optically connected to your every eager impulse." In other words, the whole culture is based on ego gratification. We're constantly inundated not just with products that you can groom yourself with, but with infinite ways in which you can satisfy your urges and reflect your own image. The Devil's Advocate portrays a very powerful world where you have these large economic entities that are constantly looking for the best and newest gunslinger WIE: So we're dealing with the same timeless issues that people have always struggled with, but they're just heightened in every way in the modern age? TH: Yes. And it's a question of how far we're willing to go in order to let the ego shine, in order to let that beacon penetrate not only the local scene but the world. Feeding that ego is what The Devil's Advocate was all about. So, getting back to your question WIE: How did you direct Pacino? As the devil, what kind of personality did you want him to express? TH: Well, it took a lot of time to convince Al to do the role. He looked at the screenplay and said, "It's another devil movie." And I said, "Al, listen, you've played Richard the Third, you'd like to play Macbeth, I'm sure you'd love to do King Lear. All of these are classic roles. The devil is also a classic role." Look at Walter Huston in The Devil and Daniel Webster: It's an incredible performance. The thing that's great about it is that this amoral character, who is an angel who has fallen from grace, resents his "father" When I sold it that way, Pacino started to get it. And I said, "You know, this character, John Milton, the man who runs the law firm, is incredibly smooth and smart. But he doesn't have to be all buttoned-down." I wanted somebody who you believe could walk into international corporate boardrooms and carry on a very intense and articulate conversation. But at the same time, he's got a little looseness to him, he's not surprised by anything, he's not uptight. He's seen it all. And Pacino looks ageless, which he is. You just feel an ease and at the same time a wit, and a devilishness perhaps, that come off of him. So what I asked Al to do was to play it very cool, very easy. When he's in his office and he's the chairman of the board of this huge international law firm, he doesn't have to evidence his power with a loud voice. Everything is easy; he's in complete control. On the other hand, when he's out in the street, when you see him walking with Keanu Reeves in Chinatown, I wanted him to reflect a whole different persona. He comes alive. These are his people, the people in the New York street. I wanted you to get a sense that John Milton was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth, that he was a self-made man, that he's got his feet on the ground. Then at the very end of the film, he's defrocked WIE: The dangers of feeding and empowering the ego are clearly depicted in the film. How far do you take this critique? TH: Well, if you're ultimately asking: Do I think we can live in an egoless society? WIE: And this invariably leads to problems. TH: Right. Because when you have millions of people with this kind of need for gratification, and the culture is saying that it's possible for everyone to satisfy all of their needs and desires all of the time, there are obviously going to be clashes WIE: In Christian theology, the most fundamental sin on the spiritual path is pride. And pride, of course, is Lucifer's mortal sin. Over and over again in the movie, the protagonist falls into the trap of his own pride, egoism and vanity. Unable to accept any kind of defeat in the courtroom, he practically throws his life away to protect his perfect string of victories. "Lose?" Keanu Reeves says at one point, trying to defend his actions, "I don't lose, I win. I win! I'm a lawyer. That's my job. That's what I do." At which point the devil looks at him calmly with a knowing smile and responds, "I rest my case. Vanity is definitely my favorite sin." Could you say more about the relationship between pride and evil, and how that informed the creation of the movie? TH: I think, at a certain point, no one is infallible. And if you think you are, if your pride gets to the point where you say, "I'm the best," there's still always going to be somebody who's better. And if it comes down to having to confront failure, that's when you want to change the playing field. In other words, then you resort to devices and techniques that are not necessarily ethical. Because you've got to preserve your ego and your pride. But you don't want to feed the ego to the point that you end up with a big cirrhosis of the liver So the devil is pushing Keanu to give in at the end, and when it doesn't happen and everything falls apart, and the devil is defeated yet again, you think, "Oh, wow, it's a happy ending." But I couldn't leave the film that way. So then it's a flashback to the very beginning. Everybody goes, "Oh, it didn't really happen. His wife is still there. All that horrible stuff didn't really happen. Isn't life great; it's a movie." And then at the very end, what I wanted was to have him do something in court that totally violates the ethics of his profession. He doesn't represent his client because he knows he's guilty. He violates that contract, and so therefore the judge is going to disbar him because you can't do that within the legal profession. He does something that is morally right, but professionally wrong. Then he walks out thinking, "I stood up. I did the right thing for the first time in my life. That's an amazing thing!" And as he goes out, he realizes, "My God, the press is going to make a hero out of me! I can be incredibly famous. I'll be on the cover of Time magazine WIE: At the climax of the movie, when the devil tempts the protagonist, he does so by offering to take away his "bag of bricks," his guilt and worry over the consequences of his actions TH: Well, first, I agree with Peck's statement. Second, in this particular story it was important to base Keanu's character in a background that was quite religious. His mother, played by Judith Ivey, is obviously a religious person who is close to the church and very orthodox in her beliefs, so you know that there have been a lot of moral teachings in this young man's life. He has a certain code of ethics that he has at least attempted to follow, and tried to stay fairly close to the line. In other words, if he's trod across the line, it's been briefly, and he's come back. But then the stakes are raised, and he goes into a new world, which in this instance we call Babylon, but it's New York City. Babylon traditionally is the place of corruption, the place of sophistication, the place of great wealth, the place of all the temptations. And you start to see that line blur, and you also see that within the context of a seemingly legitimate professional life, everyone is doing it. Everyone is doing it, so it's okay. You see the subjugation of the conscience. And the conscience is replaced by the building and the swelling of ego. And only at a certain point when everything around Keanu starts to change does he start to come to the realization, "Oh my God, I created all this." Before that, he is completely oblivious to it. This is what we were trying to say. The conscience gets buried, especially when those around you and the society celebrate the subjugation of the conscience. WIE: But Reeves's character makes several decisions during that time when he knows what's right, but he clearly chooses to do the wrong thing. So in a way, he subjugates his conscience himself TH: Absolutely, because the other side of it feels so good. What he's getting in exchange is so good. It's a process of intoxication of the ego, to the point where you're totally intoxicated. You've buried conscience. Now when you have a moral tale like this, you want to take your protagonist up to the precipice. And by the time he's at the precipice, there's a lot of bodies lying along the line. In this instance, the sacrifice is his wife. The sacrifice is this person who is closest to him, the person who has supported him. The person who really loved him WIE: In an interview you were quoted as saying of the character of the devil in the movie, "His greatest lure is what we have in common with him, our greed, ego, jealousy, competitiveness, lust, dishonesty." Could you say a bit more about that? TH: I think that there is good and evil in each of us, that we possess all of those things. You know, the piety of man would say, "I don't lust. I don't feel those things." But that's bullshit of course; human beings do. But to say, "I have no conscience; I have no sense of good," is also bullshit. You may subjugate those things, you may deny them, but they're there. And that's my point. I didn't ever want an audience to abdicate responsibility by saying, "The devil's out there. And he made me do it." The devil doesn't make you do anything. You do it yourself.
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