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A key irony in making the film was that Plame Wilson could tell the filmmakers anything they wanted to know about the emotional side of her story
-- including details of her marriage. She just couldn't tell them the facts. Every CIA agent signs a secrecy agreement when she joins. "It's good for life," she notes pointedly. So Liman and his team had to flesh out the story from material in the public domain, and from other CIA sources. Some people spoke to him, he says, "because they were outraged that she was being disparaged. Valerie could not defend herself, and that was used against her. Imagine
-- if you defend yourself, you go to jail." One aspect of the film that some have criticized is how it portrays what happened to Plame's "assets" overseas
-- the valuable contacts she had cultivated as a spy. A review in Variety called a plot twist involving an Iraqi scientist, a composite character, "apocryphal and manipulative," to which Plame Wilson quips: "I'm pretty sure they weren't on the Intel distribution list, last time I checked!" Asked what happened to "assets" like these, she answers carefully: "The CIA saw a damage report. I didn't see it. But I can say that I know what happened to some of these assets. I know that some people were placed in severe jeopardy, and it ended badly." On a less serious note, Plame Wilson allows that being portrayed onscreen by one of the most beautiful actresses in Hollywood isn't all bad. "It could be worse," she jokes. But she has a hard time judging whether Watts "got" her as a character. "You see yourself from the inside looking out," she says. "But my friends say Naomi got me. And I do think Sean got Joe
-- I wish they'd shown more of his sense of humor, but I guess it wasn't about that." As the movie heads for its opening weekend, Plame Wilson is happily home in Santa Fe
-- though she still has security concerns for her family, and "we're aware of our security posture," she notes. "We've rebuilt our lives here," she says. "We're pursuing other things. We want this episode to be a chapter, not the whole book." As for her 10-year-olds, Trevor and Samantha, she says, "This has been part of the wallpaper of their lives. But they're healthy and happy." They've also seen the movie, and every so often, Trevor asks his mom: "What was your spy name?" And as for that spy novel, Plame Wilson is working on it with local author Sarah Lovett. "I was always irked by how pop culture portrayed female CIA operatives," she says. "I wanted to write a thriller that was more realistic." For one thing, the main character probably won't have the sizzling looks of Angelina Jolie
-- or Jennifer Garner of "Alias," aka international spy Sydney Bristow. "I used to look at 'Alias,'" Plame Wilson says. "And I'd say to myself,
'I wish I had THAT body!'"
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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