Alamo touches raw nerve in Mexico

Toronto Star, 4/9/04

BYLINE: MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press

BODY:

   Mexican audiences are bracing for Alamo, which depicts this country's most reviled traitor, one of its most humiliating defeats and events that cost it half its territory.

   There is scant comfort in the fact that Mexican forces won the 1836 battle of the Alamo: The movie closes with the Battle of San Jacinto one month later, which Mexico lost - along with Texas. Within a decade, Mexico went on to lose what later became Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.

   An audience at the Mexico City premiere Wednesday gasped at the final scenes of the Mexican army defeat and massacre at the hands of Texans - "in 18 minutes, " according to the film.

   "It was very much filmed from an American point of view. It didn't have very much good to say about the Mexican side," said Felix Boucham, 63, a Mexico City retiree and history buff. "I frankly expected the audience to boo some scenes."

   Nor was it much comfort that part of the movie was in Spanish, with English subtitles, something director John Lee Hancock did for realism.

   Mexican actor Emilio Echevarria - who plays the unappetizing role of Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, who led Mexican forces at the Alamo but later surrendered Texas - hopes the film will make Mexicans reflect.

   "This chapter of history still hurts us very much, but if we don't turn back and try to understand it, we won't understand what's happening today," said Echevarria.

   "Part of the weaknesses we see in Mexico at that time are still present," said Echevarria. "We were a weakened and fragmented society back then, and that prevented us from defending ourselves. Unfortunately, I see a lot of the same thing today."

   The role of Santa Anna - a wily political schemer and Mexico's equivalent of Benedict Arnold - wasn't easy for a Mexican actor.

   "We Mexicans have always condemned him, classified him as a traitor and nothing more," said Echevarria. "But if that was all he was, then how could he have been president of Mexico 11 times?

   "Santa Anna is a very attractive role for an actor," Echevarria said. "He has so many angles." Indeed, after losing Texas, Santa Anna actually sold part of Mexico to the United States and kept coming back like the undead from exile or retirement until his death in 1876.

   At least the current Alamo movie is kinder to Mexico than John Wayne's super patriotic 1960 version, in which "the Mexican point of view wasn't even presented," said Hancock.

   The biggest question Hancock had to answer is why he didn't end the movie with the fall of the Alamo, but instead went on to depict the rebels' victory at San Jacinto.

   "Some people suggested I tacked it on at the end so the good guys could win," Hancock said. "That wasn't it. I wanted it to be the completion ... and most importantly, it is parallel bloodlust," with Texans massacring survivors just the way the Mexican army had at the Alamo.