Val Verde (fictional country)

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Val Verde is a fictional country used by Hollywood filmmakers when they require a South/Central American country without getting into legal or diplomatic hot water. In general it is a Spanish-speaking country resembling Cuba or Nicaragua.

Contents

[edit] Appearances

It has appeared in a number of films and television programs:

Shared personnel link all appearances. Commando, Die Hard 2 and Adventure Inc. were written by Steven E. de Souza, Commando and Predator star Schwarzenegger, and all three films were produced by Joel Silver; de Souza produced the ABC TV series Supercarrier.

Steven de Souza has also set the Devil's Due comic book Sheena in Val Verde and described his reason for using it:[3]

"It's something like Guyana, a country which encompasses lush Caribbean resorts popular with tourists, an unexplored mysterious rainforest, and a mix of Anglo, Spanish, African, Creole and indigenous cultures. This is a country of the imagination I've used in several films and TV programs, which I thought was my little inside baseball joke, but Eric Lichtenfield, the author of 'Actions Speak Louder,' recently sent me a Wikipedia page on it! Seriously, my Dad's family is from that part of the world and it's something I can write about with some familiarity."

[edit] Portrayal

Val Verde has principally been used as a plot device or location in place of real Latin American countries in action and adventure movies, as a particular result of America's rocky relations with many nations in the subcontinent during the 1980s.

When glimpsed in Commando, it appears to be a poor nation, where subsistence agriculture (ie. livestock) is side-by-side with military propaganda and constant military presence. Inhabitants appear poor but happy, and there is evidence of a trade embargo reminiscent of that placed on Cuba in the presence of battered but functional vintage 1950s cars.

[edit] Politics

In Commando, Val Verde is presided over by President Velázquez, an apparently capitalist leader installed by an American-backed revolution assisted by Colonel John Matrix and Captain Bennett, during which the nefarious General Arius was deposed. Arius intends to force Matrix to help him reinstate his dictatorship, but is thwarted.

In Die Hard 2, General Ramon Esperanza (Franco Nero) is a General in exile, awaiting trial in the United States. He is aided by former special forces members to escape from his prison plane. Esperanza is wanted by the U.S. government for drug trafficking, but the leader of the rogue special forces, Colonel Stuart, wishes to free Esperanza because he "stands up to communist aggression."

In Predator, apart from the presence of jungle guerillas, there is no reference to the country's political state. The presence of Soviet military advisors at the guerrilla camp would seem to indicate a capitalistic (if not democratic) form of government.

In Supercarrier a US Navy carrier is present in Val Verde when civil war breaks out and is forced to step in; this violation of Pentagon protocol, though entirely fictional, precipitated the withdrawal of Navy participation from the series.

[edit] Locations

As well as studio shots, other locations have been used to portray Val Verde on film:

[edit] Notes

[edit] References

  • Beautiful Monsters: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to the Alien and Predator Films (footnote 34, page 148, by David A. McIntee, Telos, 272 pages, 2005, ISBN 1903889944)

[edit] See also

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