U.S. actress and director Angelina Jolie, left, and U.S. actor Brad Pitt, right, arrive at the Cinema For Peace fundraising gala in Berlin, Monday, Feb. 13, 2012.
Gero Breloer, Associated Press
BERLIN — Angelina Jolie said Monday she hopes her directorial debut "In the Land of Blood and Honey" will provoke a wider discussion about rape — something that the International Criminal Court's prosecutor said could be extremely valuable in helping bring perpetrators to justice.
Jolie, who received a Cinema for Peace award for her film and the group's "honorary award for opposing war and genocide" for the movie focusing on the war in Bosnia late Monday, said she wants viewers to be "uncomfortable" when they see the film.
Jolie's writing-directing debut hurls two lovers, a Bosnian Muslim woman and a Bosnian-Serb man, from their tender relationship before the war into the horrors of prison camps where rapes occurred.
"I believe these strong issues deserve to be presented in a very strong direct light," Jolie, who was in Berlin for the Berlin International Film Festival, told a small group of reporters.
"It's a strange thing to say as a director and a filmmaker, but I want people to be very uncomfortable when they watch it, and they should be upset and they should want some intervention, and they should want it to stop and they should be angry."
The film has already provoked the ire, but of a different kind, of the sole film distributor in the Serb-run part of Bosnia, Vladimir Ljevak, who questioned its portrayal of the Serb side of the conflict and said he would not be screening it there. Still, a small group of Muslim Bosniaks who have returned to their homes in the Serb part of the country say they instead plan to organize private showings.
Jolie appeared in good spirits as she was about to receive the awards for her film. "It's a very important night for us," the actress said. Jolie was joined on the carpet by partner Brad Pitt, who said he was proud of her that evening, "and every night."
French director Luc Besson, in turn, received the group's International Human Rights Film Award for his film "The Lady," which portrays Myanmar's pro-democracy leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's struggle against the Southeast Asian country' military rule.
The Bosnian war in the early 1990s was the first time that rape was treated as a crime against humanity, and the International Criminal Court's Luis Moreno-Ocampo said that since then it has remained a major problem in conflict regions — but that slowly the court is finding more victims willing to come forward and tell their stories to aid in prosecutions.
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