Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
Voice of America is funded by the US Federal Government and content it
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June 22, 2007

'A Mighty Heart' Tells True Story of Murdered US Journalist Daniel
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Pearl
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=17E8729:A6F02AD83191E1607A5E06CCFEDC60439574F7DCC14957C0
Angelina Jolie stars as Mariane Pearl, widow of slain journalist, in
film told from her perspective





The 2002 kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl in
Pakistan is dramatized from the perspective of his widow, French-born
journalist Mariane Pearl, in a powerful new film by English director
Michael Winterbottom. It stars Oscar-winner Angelina Jolie. Alan
Silverman has a look at A Mighty Heart.

In Karachi on January 23, 2002 Daniel Pearl kissed Mariane goodbye for
the last time. The Wall Street JournalĀ  investigative reporter was off
to interview a source for a story he was researching on alleged local
links to terrorist groups.





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Angelina Jolie in scene from A Mighty HeartMariane Pearl, six months
pregnant, quickly knew something was wrong ...and her fears were
confirmed when a little-known group sent a message accusing Daniel of
being a spy and demanding the United States release all Pakistani
terror detainees.

She stood up to posturing by some political officials and embraced the
support of dedicated investigators who were as determined as she was
to find her husband. But nine days later, a graphic videotape showed
his beheading at the hands of extremists linked to al-Qaeda. Mariane
Pearl detailed her ordeal in a 2003 memoir which veteran documentary
maker Michael Winterbottom says was his guide to putting the story on
film.





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Angelina Jolie in scene from A Mighty Heart"I thought the book was
very powerful so the idea was just to go back to the book and keep the
film, in a way, as literal an adaptation as we coul," Winterbottom
says. "Obviously there are things you can do in a book which you can't
do in a film, but in the book Mariane tells the story kind of simply
from the day of Danny's kidnap to when she leaves Pakistan knowing
that he is dead. We just took that shape and lifted from the book, as
much as possible, Mariane's version of the story."

"Even to the first day of shooting I was very hesitant and scared to
do this movie," adds Angelina Jolie. "I didn't feel I'd be good enough
to pull this off and I felt it was such an important thing to do; but
I believed very much in the message and what she taught me about
overcoming fear and hate, becoming a more tolerant person."

Jolie says meeting Mariane Pearl inspired her to take on the role,
even though she admits it frightened her.





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Jolie in scene from A Mighty Heart"I don't know if I would have had
the strength to do what she did," she says, "and when I first saw her
interviews and the way she responded to what happened to her husband
...and she was able to go on days later and say 'ten other people died
this month and they were all Pakistani and they are suffering as much
as we are...' I could not, when I first heard that, understand how she
was able to come to that so quickly; and having gotten to know her and
understand where that is coming from and the importance of having
dialog and trying to go that higher ground to find solutions - I have
learned that and it is a big lesson."

For security reasons, the filmmakers opted to shoot most of Jolie's
scenes in Northern India; but Dan Futterman, who co-stars as Daniel
Pearl, went with director Winterbottom to Karachi to re-enact scenes
from the 2002 drama in the actual locations.





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Dan Futterman in scene from A Mighty Heart "To be there and get a
sense of Urdu being spoken on the street, the sort of incredible chaos
- both in good and bad ways of that city ...it is an amazing place,
teeming with 14 million people in greater Karachi, and you get the
sense of sort of bursting at the seams," he says. "I don't think you
could get that anywhere else. It was incredibly important to the
texture and the feel of the movie to be shooting actually where things
happened."

The investigator who became Mariane's greatest ally in the race
against time to rescue Daniel - a Pakistani military intelligence
officer known in the film as 'Captain' - is played by Indian star
Irfan Khan, among several leading South Asian actors in A Mighty
Heart.

"This story needed to be told and shared with as many people as
possible because of the kind of message the film has," says Khan. "I
won't call it a message ...but it is the kind of experience that
should be shared with everybody."

Director Winterbottom hopes that audiences come away from the
experience, not with anger or hate over the past, but with a sense of
hope for the future.

"When I finished reading the book I felt that Mariane had overcome the
worst experience you could imagine," he says. "To have your husband
kidnapped and killed, yet she somehow had not given in to the kind of
hatred you'd imagine she would have. If the film has a similar sense
...if people felt hatred was the wrong response and not the way
forward, then obviously that would be a great thing."

In his memory and with his parents, Mariane Pearl helped establish the
Daniel Pearl Foundation which has as its mission statement: "to
promote cross-cultural understanding through journalism, music and
innovative communications."