May 20, 2008 8:00 am US/Pacific
Jolie, Eastwood Film Premiering At Cannes Festival
CANNES, France (AP) ―
-
-
Actress Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt attend the 'Kung Fu Panda' premiere at the Palais des Festivals during the 61st Cannes International Film Festival on May 15, 2008 in Cannes, France.
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
Pregnant with twins, Angelina Jolie says the story behind her latest drama hits close to home: the loss of a child.
Jolie stars in Clint Eastwood's "Changeling," the true story of a
Los Angeles woman who endured horrors at the hands of corrupt police in
her crusade to find out what happened to her son after he vanished in
1928.
"To lose a child: I can't imagine anything worse, especially not
knowing the fate of that child," Jolie told reporters after a press
screening. "Changeling" makes its formal Cannes Film Festival premiere
later Tuesday night.
Due in theaters this fall, "Changeling" could be the latest Academy
Awards entry for Eastwood, 77, who has reinvigorated himself with a
rush of acclaimed films, including "Mystic River," "Letters From Iwo
Jima" and "Million Dollar Baby," the latter earning the second
best-picture and directing Oscars of Eastwood's career.
Jolie, 32, delivers a heartbreaking performance as Christine
Collins, a single mom who works hard so she can take good care of her
9-year-old boy, Walter. The child disappears, and five months later,
the distraught Christine is overjoyed when police tell her Walter has
been found, alive and well.
But when the boy claiming to be Walter Collins is returned to her, Christine insists that he isn't her son.
She winds up in a nightmare battle with bureaucrats trying to cover
up their own mistakes as thugs in the police department brand her an
unfit mother who wants to shirk her responsibilities as a parent.
Christine eventually is tossed into a psychiatric ward by police
seeking to silence her.
"I was so astonished by the extent to which she suffered by asking
one simple, clear question: What happened to my child," said J. Michael
Straczynski, who researched Christine Collins' ordeal and wrote the
screenplay for "Changeling." "She did all the heavy lifting. I just
wrote it down."
Meantime, an unrelated case provides a clue to Walter's fate and
that of other missing children as a detective tracks a serial killer
suspected of abducting boys and savagely slaughtering them.
"Changeling" co-stars John Malkovich, who appeared in Eastwood's "In
the Line of Fire," as a minister who comes to Christine's aid; and Amy
Ryan, an Oscar nominee for last year's "Gone Baby Gone," as a
prostitute who befriends her in the psych ward.
The film touches on themes familiar to Eastwood, who dealt with
child abduction and abuse in "A Perfect World" and "Mystic River."
"Children in danger, of course, is about the highest form of drama
you can have," Eastwood said. "Crimes against children are to me the
most heinous. ... When one comes along quite as big as this one, you
question humanity. It never ceases to surprise me how cruel humanity
can be."
Jolie was in Cannes for both "Changeling" and her animated comedy
"Kung Fu Panda," which premiered near the beginning of the festival
last week. News broke then that Jolie and partner Brad Pitt, who
already have four children, are expecting twins.
Though Jolie said she could imagine the pain and frustration if she
were in Christine's situation, she had to look beyond her own children
and position as a "very modern and very outspoken woman" to play the
character.
Christine fought her battle at a time when women did not have the
same power to speak their minds as today, Jolie said. So Jolie found
inspiration in her own mother, actress Marcheline Bertrand, who died in
January 2007.
"To me, she's very much like my mother," Jolie said. "My mother was
very passive in many ways and very, very sweet, but when it came to her
children, she was a lion. But as a woman, very shy with her own voice.
So in many ways, Christine reminded me of my mom, and it was a way to
kind of revisit my mother after her passing and spend time with her."
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
Comments