Angelina Jolie says casting story is 'false,' 'upsetting'


              FILE - In a Feb. 18, 2017 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie gives a press conference in Siem Reap province, Cambodia.  Jolie says the account of her casting process for children for her film Khmer Rouge film “First They Killed My Father” described in a recent Vanity Fair profile is false and upsetting. Jolie and producer Rithy Panh issued joint statements refuting the account Sunday, July 30, through a representative from Netflix, which is producing and distributing the film. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith, File)
FILE - In a Feb. 18, 2017 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie gives a press conference in Siem Reap province, Cambodia. Jolie says the account of her casting process for children for her film Khmer Rouge film “First They Killed My Father” described in a recent Vanity Fair profile is false and upsetting. Jolie and producer Rithy Panh issued joint statements refuting the account Sunday, July 30, through a representative from Netflix, which is producing and distributing the film. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Angelina Jolie says an account in Vanity Fair of her casting process for children to appear in her Khmer Rouge film "First They Killed My Father" is false and upsetting.

The movie deals with the childhood of a woman decades ago under the brutal Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia.

The article depicts casting directors presenting money to impoverished children and taking it away from them as an acting exercise.

Many people online criticized the process as exploitative.

Jolie and producer Rithy Panh issued joint statements Sunday refuting the account through a representative from Netflix, which is producing and distributing the film.

Jolie says parents, guardians and doctors were on set daily. Panh adds that children were not tricked or entrapped and that filmmakers took great care to ensure their welfare was protected.

Representatives of the magazine could not be immediately reached.

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