Get us in your inbox

In the Land of Blood and Honey

  • Film
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
Zana Marjanovic and Boris Ler in In the Land of Blood and Honey
Zana Marjanovic and Boris Ler in In the Land of Blood and Honey
Advertising

Time Out says

4 out of 5 stars

We've seen Angelina Jolie hang out of cars and shoot people, raid tombs in formfitting tops and sometimes appear like the more substantial part of a globally famous twosome. But if her celebrity has brought this tough Bosnian War drama into being, then the whole Brangelina thing can't be half bad---the trickier proposition will be for those who insist that their tattooed babes remain babes, not directors of skillful political drama. Jolie's In the Land of Blood and Honey is an admirably complex take on the horror of the rape camps, where Serb militia men performed ritual humiliations upon Bosnian women.

This isn't material to be traipsed over, nor clopped on earnestly, and Jolie's original script---yes---finds a deft personalization to the crisis in delicate artist Ajla (Marjanovic), a prisoner, and conflicted Danijel (Kostic, terrific), a Serb officer who once escorted her on a prewar date. Now he keeps Ajla as his exclusive plaything, ostensibly to protect her from worse offenders.

The situation is a nightmare, with Danijel's hawkish dad (Serbedzija), a general in the militia, demanding stronger stuff from his subordinate son. Occasionally, the movie italicizes its points with heavy musical drones, but its tone is remarkably even and concentrated: It makes sense that Jolie excels at stewarding the scenes she usually tears apart onscreen: two people struggling in an emotional death grip, the camera up close.

Follow Joshua Rothkopf on Twitter: @joshrothkopf

Watch the trailer

See more in Film

Written by Joshua Rothkopf
Advertising
You may also like
You may also like