Bangkok Post

Jolie unveils Khmer Rouge feature film

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>> SIEM REAP: Angelina Jolie unveiled her new film on the horrors of the Khmer Rouge era yesterday at the ancient Angkor Wat temple complex in Cambodia, a country the star shares a deep affinity with through her adopted son Maddox.

Cambodia’s king and survivors of the communist regime were among some 1,500 people invited to the debut screening of First They Killed My Father, directed by Jolie and based on the memoirs of Loung Ung. Loung Ung was five years old when Khmer Rouge troops, led by Pol Pot, swept into Phnom Penh plunging her family into a harrowing ordeal that saw them sent to brutal labour camps before her eventual escape to the United States.

In its quest for an agrarian Marxist utopia, the regime killed up to two million Cambodians between 1975-79 through execution, starvation and overwork.

It is the second movie by Jolie to tackle the subject of genocide — in 2011 she made a film about the Bosnian conflict featuring mostly local actors.

But her latest silver screen offering is more personal. Jolie adopted her first child Maddox from an orphanage in Cambodia’s western Battambang province in 2002 and she has been given Cambodian citizenshi­p.

The Hollywood star previously said it was Maddox who pushed her to make the film.

At a press conference in Siem Reap, Jolie described Cambodia as a “second home”, adding that she chose Loung Ung’s book because she wanted to tell the story of the Khmer Rouge era “through the eyes of a child”.

It also brought her closer to her son, she said. “I wanted to focus not just on the war but on the love of family and on the beauty of the country and in fact I wanted to understand what my son’s birth parents may have gone through. And I wanted to know him better and I wanted to know this country better,” she said.

Maddox is accompanyi­ng his mother on the trip and was seen visiting the Angkor temple complex on Friday.

In a tribute to those who survived the brutal regime, Jolie has pushed to ensure the film would be both made by Cambodians and accessible to them.

Almost the entire film is in the Khmer language while the cast members and much of the crew were local hires, including the two child protagonis­ts.

The film is also co-produced by Rithy Panh, Cambodia’s most acclaimed filmmaker.

He lost almost all his immediate family during the Khmer Rouge years but went on to produce searing documentar­ies that helped break the silence surroundin­g the genocide.

Loung Ung, who Jolie described as a “family friend”, said that while the film centered on her family’s experience, her story would be familiar to all Cambodians. “I view it as the story of all of us,” she told reporters.

Despite the prosecutio­n of a few top Khmer Rouge cadres, the genocide continues to be a controvers­ial subject.

Strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen, who was a former regime cadre before he defected and has run the impoverish­ed country for more than 30 years, is opposed to any new prosecutio­ns of regime leaders. But the Cambodian government has welcomed Jolie’s film so far.

“The movie reflects the brutality of the Khmer Rouge regime,” Sin Chanchhaya, director of Cambodia’s Cinema and Cultural Diffusion Department said.

The premiere will be followed by screenings across Cambodia, some seven months before the film is released to a global audience on Netflix.

 ??  ?? FEELING AT HOME: Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie waves with her adopted children, from left, Pax, Maddox, Zahara and Shiloh, in Siem Reap, Cambodia, yesterday.
FEELING AT HOME: Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie waves with her adopted children, from left, Pax, Maddox, Zahara and Shiloh, in Siem Reap, Cambodia, yesterday.

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