VATICAN CITY (AP) — Angelina Jolie has met with rock stars, refugees and royalty.
The actress, 
director and U.N. special envoy added pontiff to the list on Thursday, 
meeting with Pope Francis briefly after screening her film "Unbroken" to
 some Vatican officials and ambassadors.
The
 Vatican said Jolie and two of her children were on hand at the 
Pontifical Academy for Sciences to screen the film, which tells the 
story of Louis Zamperini, an Olympic track star whose B-24 bomber 
crashed in the Pacific during World War II. He and two crewmates 
survived on a raft for 47 days, only to be captured by the Japanese.
Vatican
 spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said the film shows "positive 
human and spiritual values, in particular forgiveness."
Francis
 didn't watch the film but exchanged a few words with Jolie afterward 
when she was brought up to the Apostolic Palace — along with the 
children, her brother and a cast member. The meeting was arranged by the
 Argentine head of the pontifical academy, Monsignor Marcelo Sanchez 
Sorondo, who is a good friend of the pope's.
Vatican
 photos of the encounter show Jolie, dressed in a demure black suit — as
 papal protocol requires — gently clasping Francis' hands and smiling in
 the silk brocaded "Throne Room," where Francis usually greets heads of 
state.
Lombardi stressed that the 
meeting wasn't a formal audience per se, but rather a brief and cordial 
greeting in which the pope paid particular attention to Jolie and the 
children, giving them Vatican souvenirs.
"It all lasted just a few minutes, even though it was naturally very significant for those present," he said.
"Unbroken"
 has sought to appeal to faith-based audiences, given that Zamperini was
 a Christian inspirational speaker who attributed his survival to his 
faith. Though the film doesn't focus on Zamperini's Christianity, its 
North American box-office success ($90.7 million in two weeks) has been 
partly based on the interest of movie-going faithful.

 
 
 
 
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