‘I don’t recognise my country,’ says Angelina Jolie amid free speech concerns in US

    • Angelina Jolie attends a press conference for the film "Couture" at the San Sebastian Film Festival, San Sebastian, Spain, Sep 21, 2025.
    • Angelina Jolie attends a press conference for the film "Couture" at the San Sebastian Film Festival, San Sebastian, Spain, Sep 21, 2025. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Sep 22, 2025 · 06:43 AM

    AMERICAN actress Angelina Jolie said on Sunday (Sep 21) she no longer recognises her country, voicing concern over threats to free expression while presenting her latest film at Spain’s San Sebastian film festival.

    Her comments come as worries grow over free speech in the United States, after President Donald Trump’s crackdown on critical media and the recent suspension of late-night host Jimmy Kimmel’s show over comments on the recent killing of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.

    “I love my country, but I don’t at this time recognise my country,” Jolie said when asked if she feared for freedom of speech in the US.

    “Anything, anywhere, that divides or, of course, limits personal expressions and freedoms and, from anyone, I think is very dangerous,” she added.

    “These are very, very heavy times we are all living in together.”

    The 50-year-old was in San Sebastian to promote Couture, directed by French filmmaker Alice Winocour, which is competing for the festival’s top prize, the Golden Shell.

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    She plays Maxine Walker, an American film director facing divorce and a serious illness while navigating Paris Fashion Week and embarking on a romance with a colleague, played by French actor Louis Garrel.

    The Oscar-winning actress – honoured in 1999 for her role in Girl, Interrupted – said she related personally to the struggles of her latest character.

    Jolie underwent a double mastectomy in 2013 and later had her ovaries and fallopian tubes removed to reduce her high genetic risk of cancer, which claimed the lives of her mother and grandmother.

    Visibly moved, she said she thought often of her mother while making the film.

    “I wish she was able to speak more as openly as I have been, and have people respond as graciously as you have, and not feel as alone,” Jolie said.

    “There’s something very particular to women’s cancers, because obviously it affects us (and) how we feel as women. AFP

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