‘A Private War’ goes to frontline to tell reporter’s story

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McCarthy says just as comfortable with drama

LONDON, Oct 21, (RTRS): Award-winning American war reporter Marie Colvin was known for her dispatches from some of the world’s most brutal conflicts. Now a new film starring “Gone Girl” actress Rosamund Pike tells her story about being fearless on the battlefront.

Focusing on the last decade of her life, “A Private War” takes audiences to the frontlines of fighting in Sri Lanka, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and Syria. Colvin, reporting for Britain’s Sunday Times, was killed in Syria in 2012.

Based on an article about Colvin in Vanity Fair, the film for which Pike wears a patch to cover the eye the journalist lost in a blast in Sri Lanka in 2001, follows her evading gunfire and digging for the truth as well as the effects her war zone trips had on her personally.

“I just thought ‘My gosh, this is a woman who would be a joy to kind of get people to see’… this complicated, ferocious, driven, ambitious, vulnerable, romantic soul and put that out on screen,” Pike told Reuters. “Because… oh yes is she a role model, but a role model in a real way.”

“Fifty Shades” star Jamie Dornan plays photographer Paul Conroy, who accompanied Colvin on trips and was with her when she died in Homs while covering the Syrian conflict.

“It gives you a far more sort of heightened respect for the people who go to these places and try to report the actual truth of what’s happening,” Dornan said.

Conroy, who worked as the set photographer for the film, said the actors had caught “the essence” of his relationship with Colvin.

“(Colvin) was a force of nature… It was like peeling an onion back, she just kept going further and further and further in… until we were at what she considered the heart of it,” Conroy said.

The film is directed by Oscar-nominated documentary maker Matthew Heineman, whose past works include covering activists grouping together against Islamic State in Syria.

“In this world of sort of fake news and with journalism under attack… I think it’s both a homage to Marie (and also) a homage to journalism and the importance of journalism,” he said.

Heineman said he wanted to make the film, shot in Jordan for the war zone scenes, as “authentic as possible” and cast Syrian refugees who tell their stories.

“We spent a tonne of time researching every single detail, looking at every image we could to try to recreate these war zones but a huge part of that were the people we put on screen,” he said.

“Most of the extras were non-actors, refugees from those countries who are living in Jordan. They are telling their real stories. Ultimately it created a real heightened sense of emotion on set.”

Also:

LONDON: “Bridesmaids” star Melissa McCarthy may be best known for her comedy roles, but the actress said she is just as comfortable doing drama as she brought her movie “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” to the BFI London Film Festival on Friday.

The 48-year-old, also known for her impersonations of former White House spokesman Sean Spicer on “Saturday Night Live”, plays American biographer Lee Israel, who in the early 1990s started forging letters from prominent names, such as playwright Noel Coward, after her literary career ground to a halt.

McCarthy, who has also starred in television series “Gilmore Girls”, frumps up for the role and her portrayal of Israel as a prickly and unfriendly writer has been hailed by critics.

“I’ve probably done more drama than comedy in my span since I was 20 years old. I think I’m known more for comedy but to me it’s not different at all,” McCarthy told Reuters at the film’s London premiere.

“I prepare for a character the exact same way and I never really even think about if it’s drama (or) comedy, it just kind of hopefully will happen organically… a good story and portraying these kind of flawed complicated women is a gift.”

British actor Richard E. Grant co-stars in the film as Israel’s friend Jack Hock, who is HIV positive and who soon becomes her accomplice in selling the forged letters. “He’s one of those people that lives hedonistically for the moment, in the day, because he doesn’t know how many more days he’s got left and that gives a kind of, sort of immediacy and poignancy to deal with,” he said.

“I had friends who died of AIDS in the early 90s around when this film was set so…you feel like you are honouring something that is only a historical blink away but is also of another time.”

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