"There's an urgency, a resonance and a topicality that, as a film-maker, makes it very stimulating and exciting material to work with."
Movie review: Zero Dark Thirty
Following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the hunt for Osama bin Laden preoccupied the world for more than a decade. In the end, it took a small, dedicated team of CIA operatives to track him down to a compound in Pakistan.
Every aspect of the operatives' mission was shrouded in secrecy and, though some of the details have since been made public, many of the most significant parts of the intelligence operation are brought to the screen for the first time in Zero Dark Thirty (the military code for the time - 12.30am - when the Navy Seals first stepped into bin Laden's hiding place).
Bigelow says: "The war on terror has touched everybody around the world ... it was a real honour to tell a story of that long, dark decade between 9/11 and May 1, 2011 [the date on which bin Laden was killed by the Seals]."
The greatest creative challenge posed to Bigelow and Mark Boal - the journalist-turned-screenwriter and producer of both this movie and The Hurt Locker - was how to tell a multi-faceted story within the timeframe of a movie.
"That was tricky because you've got masses of information," says Bigelow. "But the events were inherently very dramatic and the narrative lined up fairly well, certainly around the main characters."
The project actually began as a film about the failure to capture bin Laden in Tora Bora; the crew was in pre-production when they heard that bin Laden had been killed. Boal, who has been Bafta and Oscar-nominated for his screenplay, had to start again.
He travelled to Washington, Pakistan and other parts of the Middle East for several months, diving into 80-plus hour weeks to gather first-hand accounts from those involved in the hunt.
"For me, it was interesting to give the audience a glimpse inside the intelligence community and inside an operation that was so incredibly complex and definitely successful, but against impossible odds," says Bigelow. "The public knows very little about what the unsung heroes in the intelligence community go through, which is as it has to be, but here you get a rare opportunity to have a first-hand look at the men and women at the heart of one of the most covert operations in our history."
That's primarily achieved through the experiences of Maya who, over the decade, metamorphoses from a shell-shocked new recruit to steely navigator.
Along with the audience, Maya is plunged into the hunt for bin Laden by witnessing the unsettling experience of an "enhanced interrogation" sequence with an al-Qaeda detainee.
The controversial scenes - which depict the use of the torture technique "waterboarding" during the early stages of the hunt - have sparked global debate, but Bigelow stands by her decision to include them.
"As a human being I wanted to cover my eyes, but as a film-maker, I felt a responsibility to document and bear witness," she says. "I think in a way it's a compliment to the film to stimulate such a vital conversation. It's only disappointing when the film is mischaracterised."
Bigelow's shoot took place on three continents, and involved night-vision shots, 120 speaking parts and an exact replica of bin Laden's compound.
"It was by far exponentially more complicated than anything I'd done before, even The Hurt Locker, which I thought was very difficult at the time," says Bigelow.
But if she ever felt overwhelmed by the sheer scope of what she'd undertaken, she isn't one to admit it.
"Actually, I was just so honoured to tell this story. I think of it as a story of a lifetime, so I was just very excited and very proud."
The only child of a paint factory manager and a librarian, Bigelow originally trained as an artist, spending two years at the highly-regarded San Francisco Art Institute, before later landing a scholarship to study film at Columbia University School of Arts. She graduated in 1979, and her first feature-length film, The Loveless, starring Willem Dafoe, was released a few years later in 1982.
As well as directing films of many genres through the years, she was married, briefly, to James Cameron, which provided a gag for Golden Globe host Amy Poehler: "When it comes to torture I trust the woman who was married to James Cameron for three years."
Zero Dark Thirty has been nominated for five Oscars including Best Picture, but Bigelow isn't in the running for Best Director. Does she feel snubbed?
"What I'm excited by is the fact the film is performing so well at the box office," she says. "There's such an outpouring of excitement for it, so that's really what's incredibly gratifying."
Who: Kathryn Bigelow
What: Zero Dark Thirty, her Oscar-nominated film about the hunt for Osama Bin Laden
When: Opens at cinemas today
- TimeOut / AAP