It begins in the spring of 1992. A young artist named Ajla (Zana Marjanović) makes herself pretty for her boyfriend, a cop named Danijel (Goran Kostić), who she meets up with at an intimate nightclub in Sarajevo. At this point, we know virtually nothing about them, apart from the fact that they’re in love. But as the music slows and the two embrace for a romantic dance, a bomb destroys the club, killing some and critically wounding others. As far as the plot is concerned, the Bosnian War has suddenly started. In reality, tensions had been mounting for years following the economic decline of Yugoslavia, which acted as a buffer zone between westernized Europe and the Soviet Union. The 1980 death of President Josip Broz Tito didn’t help matters much, for he was no longer able to maintain the unity he created between the Bosniaks, the Serbs, and the Croats, the country’s three largest religious and ethnic groups.
At first glance, “In the Land of Blood and Honey” seems to be ignoring these broad historical facts. But the more we watch scene after scene of violence and bloodshed, the more we realize that first time writer/director Angelina Jolie is in fact educating us. It’s merely a question of method; rather than explain the Bosnian War with cold academic detachment, she instead narrows in and humanizes it. From the images of shell bombings and gunfights to the human atrocities of ethnic cleansing and mass rape, we’re not spared the horrors of this conflict. Jolie, well known for her humanitarian efforts, made it a point to cast actors from the Bosnia and Herzegovina area, allowed them to speak their native language, and even involved them in the screenwriting process. It’s no wonder, then, that this aspect of the story feels the most authentic.
But the film is equal parts war story and tragic romance, and it’s the latter part that I find myself questioning. In the same narrative tradition as “Romeo and Juliet,” the love story between Ajla and Danijel is challenged by the opposing ideologies of their respective peoples. Only after the nightclub bombing and the country’s descent into chaos do we learn that Ajla is a Bosniak and Danijel is a Serb. Popular opinion dictates that they should hate each other. Not long after the war starts, Ajla is part of large a group of Bosniak women arrested and taken to a prisoner-of-war camp; as it so happens, the place is run by Danijel, now a captain in the Serbian Army. Many of the women are repeatedly raped, but Ajla, through Danijel’s influence, is left untouched. She is, however, still required to do degrading menial tasks such as serve the soldiers’ food. |