BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: GAY THEMED FILM "GO WEST" SPARKS CONTROVERSY AND DEATH THREATS
Record ID:
278179
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: GAY THEMED FILM "GO WEST" SPARKS CONTROVERSY AND DEATH THREATS
- Title: BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA: GAY THEMED FILM "GO WEST" SPARKS CONTROVERSY AND DEATH THREATS
- Date: 9th April 2005
- Summary: SARAJEVO, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA (APRIL 8, 2005) (REUTERS) DIRECTOR AND EDITOR WORKING IN THE STUDIO
- Embargoed: 24th April 2005 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: SARAJEVO, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
- Country: Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Reuters ID: LVA8I9DB272XDVBVMZEMJ1X35ODM
- Story Text: Go West is not an explicit film by western standards
but its director has received death threats, religious
groups have condemned it and those who have actually seen
the film do not want to be identified for fear of attack.
Go West, directed by Ahmed Imamovic, is set to be
released in August at the Sarajevo Film Festival and
possibly at Cannes. The film has sparked a furious debate
about one of the great taboos of Bosnian society:
homosexuality.
In a small editing studio in the city producer Samir
Smajic is busy putting the final touches on the film.
"Even before it was released, this movie was condemned by
certain
people although none of them has seen
the movie. We received
various threats but we paid no attention to that. We hope
that once they see the movie people will be proud of it,
and proud that it has
been made here in Sarajevo and in Bosnia and Herzegovina",
he told Reuters.
Observers say Go West breaks new ground in the Bosnian
film industry. Most Bosnian films during the past few years
have centred on the rights and wrongs of the 1992-95
Bosnian war, and the role of the international community in
it - like the Oscar-winning No Man's Land.
But the new film goes one step further, using the war as
a backdrop to address homosexuality.
"The main idea of the movie is to show that here in
Balkans people are more likely to accept war criminals than
homosexuals as normal people", Smajic says.
Go West tells the story of a gay male couple - one
Muslim, one Serb - and their attempts to get out of Bosnia
at the start of the war in 1992.
It is not, by western standards, an explicit film. But in
a society where religion, whether it be Islam, Serbian
Orthodox or Catholicism, plays such a powerful role, the
film has run into a storm of criticism.
Ahmed Imamovic, who won the 2002 European Film Academy
award for his short movie Ten Minutes, hopes his new film
will get its premier at the Cannes Film Festival in May.
But others in Bosnia hope it never sees the light of day. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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