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Friday, September 30, 2016

Snowden (2016): Bringing A Whistleblower to Life

Oliver Stone has, by most accounts, produced his best movie in quite a while in Snowden, a biopic of Edward Snowden. Mr. Snowden, of course, is the whistleblower/document leaker who, in June 2013 released a trove of NSA (US National Security Agency) documents revealing the American government’s widespread, secret global and domestic electronic surveillance programs. Much of this surveillance - which included most of our emails, social media posts, phone calls, and more - was hitherto unknown, and a good deal of it was warrantless, probably illegal, and had been falsely denied by government officials in testimony before the US Congress. The disclosure of the scope and seemingly unconstrained nature of this electronic spying sent shockwaves through the body politic.

The story of  how these revelations came about and the drama of Mr. Snowden’s secret, tension-filled contacts with journalist Glenn Greenwald and documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras were portrayed in Poitras’ brilliant, engrossing Academy Award winning 2014 documentary, Citizenfour, reviewed here in November of that year. That film provided the first in depth public view of this young, bright, committed, highly knowledgeable, and idealistic young man (he was just thirty when he broke this story). Documentaries rarely get much traction at the box office however, and, awards and other accolades notwithstanding, very few moviegoers saw Citizenfour on the big screen.

So, although Snowden’s big reveal got a fair amount of press, with pundits and commentators freely sharing their (often vituperative) opinions about the guy, not much actually was known about him. This was true even for those of us who saw the documentary; in front of Poitras’ camera, Mr. Snowden divulged little about himself apart from his public interest justifications for leaking the information. He did not want to be the story. But who he is and how he came to become our most famous whistleblower IS important. A current political question, for example, is whether Snowden should be pardoned or prosecuted for his actions. (He has been charged with theft of public property and violation of the Espionage Act of 1917.) How we judge him may well depend on his motivation – was it money? Fame?  Patriotism? Who was Edward Snowden, really? How could such a young guy have gained access to so much confidential and incendiary information? Did he have help, and if so from who?

Stone’s new movie seeks to answer these questions, to fill in Snowden’s backstory, to humanize him, and, significantly, to reach a mainstream audience. It has already been seen by far more moviegoers than Citizenfour - with US box office receipts in just its first ten days that are eight times greater than Citizenfour’s  $2.8 million total take.

Snowden the movie is not a documentary, but a rich dramatization, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Looper, The Walk) as Ed; Shailene Woodley (The Descendants) as Lindsay Mills, his long-term girlfriend; Melissa Leo (Frozen River, The Fighter) as Poitras, and Zachary Quinto (Star Trek series) as Greenwald. The film is structured as a string of recollections, with the “present” being the sequence featured in Citizenfour when, in June 2013, Ed reveals all to Greenwald, Poitras and journalist Ewan MacAskill (Tom Wilkinson [Shakespeare In Love, Selma]) in a fraught Hong Kong hotel room.  Snowden’s past life is chronologically revealed in multiple flashbacks.

Early on, Ed trains as an army ranger, but when this career is foreclosed by a devastating injury, his doctor advises that “there are other ways you can serve your country.”  Following this, Ed applies to and is accepted by the CIA in its cyber war division, acing the entry tests and excelling at electronic security assignments. As depicted in Snowden, Ed rose pretty rapidly as a whiz kid expert, eventually leaving The Company to continue his security work on a consulting basis through private companies. As Ed learns about the extent of the government’s surveillance  capacities and programs and, over time, how these programs are being used domestically, we share his incredulity and developing concerns. When he asks questions about the legitimacy and legality of this stuff, he’s essentially told that security trumps all other considerations and to just do his job. Rhys Ifans (Notting Hill, The Amazing Spiderman) does a neat job as Corbin O’Brian, Ed’s omnipresent, kind-of creepy mentor and the stand-in for undoubtedly many such authority figures encountered by Snowden during his career. (Literary note: O’Brien is the name of the treacherous government agent in 1984)

 We also watch as Ed meets and falls in love with with Lindsay (Woodley), and how this relationship opens this driven, geeky guy to new ideas about life in general and his in particular, while humanizing him for us. Woodley’s supporting performance is a highlight of the movie.

Gordon-Levitt inhabits Snowden’s character credibly, beautifully and subtly, in a mostly low key performance. He sounds like him, looks like him, carries himself like him. He is in every scene, and remains not only watchable but intriguing throughout. This is quite an accomplishment in a story about an information analyst/computer programmer, a guy who spends most of his time typing on a keyboard and staring at a monitor. But as the story moves along, Gordon-Levitt is able to convey the anxiety that envelopes Ed as he comes to understand that a choice must be made, resolves what he feels he must do, and painfully realizes what his decision will mean for him personally and for Lindsay. There’s also a nifty sequence at the end, as the credits begin, showing Ed in his Moscow apartment, which shifts seamlessly from Gordon-Levitt to the real Ed Snowden – emphasizing the realism of the previous portrayal.

The story is also gripping and fascinating in its depiction and explication of the data gathering programs Ed is accessing, how these work, and why such massive surveillance is so potentially threatening for a free society. Much credit must be given to the creative minds of the art and visual effects team for coming up with arresting visual displays to graphically show us what this stuff is all about and how it works.

The pacing of Snowden is steady and methodical; and some might even find it a bit slow. Yet, some reviewers have characterized the move as “galvanizing”, “fascinating”, and thrilling. It is certainly a well made movie. I’d call it intelligent.

Is this picture objective or is it just some propaganda piece? Well, It’s by Oliver Stone whose films always have a point of view. Stone clearly admires Edward Snowden for his courage, sees him as highly patriotic, and believes that his actions were justified and valuable; and there is a hagiographic tone to the story. But I’d argue that this is well deserved. Edward Snowden did, in fact, provide a great public service in exposing government deceit and electronic surveillance practices that many, on both sides of the political spectrum, believe to be egregious and unlawful. Snowden tried to do so in a most responsible way, by providing his material to knowledgeable, responsible journalists - unlike, say, Chelsea Manning, who simply handed mountains of highly classified and sensitive military and diplomatic material to Wikileaks, which then posted these documents, largely un-reviewed and unredacted, onto the internet. In this respect Snowden seems to me more like Daniel Ellsberg, who released the Pentagon papers to the New York Times, the Washington Post and other papers in 1971, exposing proof of government mendacity and misinformation relative to the Vietnam war. As to the question of whether Ed Snowden was aided by or working for Russia (or other hostile state or entity) as he gathered the documents he eventually released, there is no suggestion of this in the film (nor has any credible evidence of this charge ever emerged, notwithstanding insinuations to this effect by unnamed security “sources” and a couple of right wing congressmen).

I’d encourage you to check out Snowden. Regardless of what you think of his actions, Edward Snowden is a major figure of our time who has brought public attention to an important issue for democratic societies. Watch the film, follow up with some further reading if you are aroused to do so, then make up your own mind. At a  very minimum you’ll be entertained.

In wide release.


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