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Indybay Feature

Afghan family fear for their lives over film's rape scene

by via UK Independent
Tuesday, September 18, 2007 : The Kite Runner has run into trouble. The film version of a best-selling book that has put Afghanistan on the literary map will not be screened in Kabul after controversy erupted over a pivotal rape scene.
Khaled Hosseini's novel hinges on a life-changing boyhood incident. Amir, the narrator and a privileged member of the Pashtun tribe, witnesses the sexual assault of Hassan, his Hazara servant and best friend who races to retrieve the fallen kites of opponents during flying contests. The guilt about his cowardly failure to intervene and help his friend haunts Amir throughout his life.

But the father of Ahmad Khan, the Afghan boy who plays Hassan in the film, sees this element of the story in very different terms. He is angry about the rape portrayed in the film and worried that it could have dangerous repercussions for his family.

"They said they would not film this part," Mr Ahmad told BBC Radio. "Of course I am worried about it. My own people from my own tribe will turn against me because of the story. They may cut my throat, they may kill me, they may torture me, anything could happen to me."

A representative of the film's Paramount Vantage studio confirmed that the film would not be released in Afghanistan, but said this was because there was no suitable distribution network in the country. When asked about the rape controversy, she declined to comment.

The film's director, Marc Forster, whose previous hits include Monster's Ball and Finding Neverland, has spoken about his determination to have an authentic Afghan feel to his new film. Although the Taliban insurgency forced the film-makers to shoot the movie in China, the script stayed in the Dari dialect.

Forster used two Afghan schoolboys for the lead roles. "I went in [to a school] and played and improvised with them to find the ones who had the strongest connection to the characters," he said in a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times. "We had very early conversations with the families."

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