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CLAUDE VICKERY is the director/producer of Run For Your
Life. He joined the fifth estate in 1990. Among the documentaries Claude
has produced for the fifth estate are SPIES,
LIES AND SECRET WEAPONS (espionage, bribery, and a quest for a Russian
super torpedo), THE
MURDERED BRIDE (a young Sikh woman from Vancouver marries outside
her caste and sets off a tragic chain of events), and AIR RAGE.
CLAUDE VICKERY: I was cruising
on the web and I came across a website that the Los Angeles Times has.
They had done a piece they called “Enrique’s
Journey”. They told the story of Central American young people,
teenagers, going all the way from Honduras to the United States…and
I thought, wow, that’s an interesting story and the photographs
are really interesting. SALLY REARDON: AS A STORYTELLER, THERE MUST HAVE BEEN AN ESSENTIAL DRAMA THAT GRIPPED YOU ABOUT THIS STORY. WHAT WAS IT? CLAUDE VICKERY: It’s
all drama. The thing that captures your attention is hopping on trains
because it’s so dangerous. So, if you say what is it that attracts your attention it’s hard to imagine a more dramatic, a greater challenge for a young person who’s sixteen, seventeen, eighteen to set out from Honduras and go through what amounts to running the gauntlet…stakes are enormously high.
SALLY REARDON: NOW AS
YOU SAY THERE ARE THOUSANDS OF THESE YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN WHO EMBARK ON
THIS PERILOUS JOURNEY. BUT YOU HAD TO FIND ONE WHOSE STORY YOU WANTED
TO TELL. HOW DID YOU GO ABOUT FINDING THAT ONE PERSON? CLAUDE VICKERY: Absolutely. We had a little bit of insurance in the sense that he went with three other young men, all of these people friends from the same neighbourhood in Tegucigalpa. And we always thought if Quique doesn’t make it perhaps one of the other three will make it. But we always thought that Quique had probably the best chance of making it. He had twice before attempted to reach el norte and twice he had failed. So he’d accumulated a lot of experience. By the time he was tackling this again, seven years later, he knew the ropes. We really thought he had an extremely good chance. SALLY REARDON: NOW TELL ME ABOUT THE PROCESS OF FIGURING OUT HOW YOU WERE ACTUALLY GOING TO TELL THIS STORY. CLAUDE VICKERY: We went into
this story with a lot of really grandiose ideas about how we could use
modern technology to do this. I spent time trying to figure out if could
we put some sort of a tracking bracelet on Quique, but none of that technology
was in a state that would make it possible. Then we looked at them carrying
a GPS [Global Positioning System] device so that at least they would be
able to report to us their precise coordinates, so we could follow them
that way. That didn’t work because they didn’t want to carry
a GPS device because they thought it was too much of an attraction to
robbery. They’re always running from something. They’re
basically in hiding. So, it’s very difficult to try and follow them.
So, the only thing you end up doing is trying to physically shadow their
movements and that presents a lot of difficulties in itself.
SALLY REARDON: WHAT FORMAT CAMERA DID ALL OF YOU USE WHEN YOU WERE SHOOTING? CLAUDE VICKERY: We actually used four different kinds of cameras. Juan de Dios had a Sony Handycam-type camera. We had a small digital camera for Jorge Flores, probably the smallest format that they have. I had one of the Sony high-end Handycams and Colin Allison had a conventional SX Betacam. SALLY REARDON:
AS JOURNALISTS YOU KNEW THAT YOU COULDN’T GIVE QUIQUE OR
ANY OF HIS FRIENDS ANY ASSISTANCE. YOU JUST HAD TO RECORD THE EVENTS AS
THEY UNFOLDED. DID THIS POSE ANY DIFFICULTIES FOR YOU AT SOME POINT? SALLY REARDON: ONE OF THE MOST CHILLING MOMENTS FOR ME IS WHEN QUIQUE LOOKS INTO COLIN ALLISON’S CAMERA AND SAYS COLIN, PUT THE CAMERA AWAY, IT’S WAY TOO DANGEROUS. TELL ME ABOUT THAT MOMENT. CLAUDE VICKERY: They had been
robbed the night before. The Mara Salvatrucha gang had come onto their
railcar and taken every last cent that they had. It means that either
you’ve got to bum some money off your fellow travellers or you’ve
got to go into towns and essentially beg for money or beg for food. So,
they had just gone from being quasi-independent to being alone in the
world. And Quique was pretty shook up. He’s a pretty together guy
and pretty strong guy, but this particular incident with the gang really
shook him up and he just anticipated many more episodes of this. SALLY REARDON: ANOTHER MOMENT IN THE DOCUMENTARY THAT I FIND REALLY HEARTBREAKING IS THE CLINIC THAT YOU GO TO WHERE WE SEE THE EVIDENCE OF JUST HOW HOW DANGEROUS HOPPING TRAINS CAN BE. TELL ME ABOUT THAT. CLAUDE VICKERY: It’s
really a heartbreaking situation. This is a very small clinic in Tapachula,
Mexico. It’s run by a Christian organization on an absolute shoestring,
just donations that come in from ordinary people. I don’t think
the Mexican government really gives them any money at all. SALLY REARDON: AT ONE POINT IN THE DOCUMENTARY QUIQUE AND HIS TRAVELLING COMPANIONS DISAPPEAR. YOU CAN’T FIND THEM. YOU MUST HAVE REALLY DESPAIRED AT SOME POINTS IN THIS PROCESS THAT YOU HAD ACTUALLY LOST THEM. TELL ME ABOUT THAT. CLAUDE VICKERY: Well, to be
honest with you we despaired more from a technological standpoint before
the emotional standpoint because we’re so accustomed in North America
to being able to contact people at every moment of the day. You can call
with a cell phone and what not. So, when you get back into the third world
and you get the situation with the train it’s just enormously frustrating
that you can’t do what you normally do in North America. You get
separated frequently. SALLY REARDON: I WANT TO TURN TO THE PARALLEL STORY IN YOUR DOCUMENTARY, THE STORY OF EDWIN RAUDALES. TELL ME AT WHAT POINT IN THE PROCESS DID YOU FIND OUT ABOUT EDWIN’S STORY AND HOW YOU THOUGHT THAT PLAYED INTO YOUR DOCUMENTARY. CLAUDE VICKERY: We knew about
Edwin’s story from the get-go. I always thought it was a fascinating
story as the other bookend to the story that we were trying to do in Honduras.
Edwin Raudales had left Honduras when he was fifteen. In a lot of ways
he was just like Quique. Edwin Raudales had hitchhiked and took buses
and he’d actually made it into Canada, which only a very small number
of these kids ever do. SALLY REARDON: AND JUST AS THERE WAS THE UNCERTAINTY ABOUT WHETHER OR NOT QUIQUE WOULD ACTUALLY FINISH HIS JOURNEY, THERE WAS ALSO THE UNCERTAINTY ABOUT EDWIN’S SITUATION, WASN’T THERE? CLAUDE VICKERY: It’s really interesting how it happened because Edwin’s story had kind of concluded a couple of years earlier when there had been an interim decision that he could stay in Canada while he was finishing his Grade Twelve school year. When we were filming with him and Edwin pulls out this letter, completely out of the blue. No one was expecting it. It was the final verdict on his case from the bureaucrats in Ottawa. Everybody shared the moment at the same time. It was quite an amazing moment because his status was frozen two years before that. It was like somebody had hit the pause button and then it was like somebody hit the play button two years later and you were just kind of catching the end of the story. So, it was a bit of serendipity. SALLY REARDON: IT’S BEEN PROBABLY CLOSE TO A YEAR SINCE YOU STARTED WORKING ON THIS. AS YOU LOOK BACK ON IT WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT MOST? CLAUDE VICKERY: Well, I think
Quique and his family are the things that I remember the most. We were
just so impressed with what wonderful, dignified people they were. We
liked his family enormously and liked Quique and his friends enormously.
SALLY REARDON: HOW DID THIS STORY CHALLENGE YOU AS A DOCUMENTARY MAKER?
The geography conspires against you. The police and the army and the gangs conspire against you. But, I was convinced that we had the right people. We certainly had the right sort of central character. I did really feel that we were getting a real sense of a typical story. We weren’t getting somebody that had an unusually difficult time or an unusually easy time of it. It just struck me as being consistent with everything I’d read about this. As a journalist, you just felt a lot of times like you were being swept up in something that was a lot bigger than you were and a lot bigger than your capacity to convey it. But, this is why I was so happy that we were able to focus on one person. When you look at something and it’s a hundred people or two hundred people or a thousand people doing it you tend to de-personalise it and you tend to not take it terribly seriously. But, when it’s one person and one person’s struggle and one person’s adventure I think people can really identify with that. I can certainly identify with him. Journalistically, that’s where the heart of it is for me. SALLY REARDON: IS THERE ANYTHING THAT YOU WANT TO ADD EITHER ABOUT THE MAKING OF THE DOCUMENTARY OR ANY OTHER ASPECT OF IT? CLAUDE VICKERY: The major thing
is that we had enormously great people working on the show. Colin Allison
did wonderful work, Jorge Flores basically did the yeoman service. He
did camera work for us but he also looked after so much of the minutiae
and was with our characters for so much of the trip. We could not have
done this kind of program without these resources, particularly in Honduras.
the fifth estate: Run for Your Life
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