Snowden
Blu-Ray
Review
by Kam Williams
Docudrama
Revisits Exploits of Expatriated Whistleblower
Citizenfour won the 2016 Academy Award in the Best Documentary category. But given how the movie made less than $4 million worldwide, one might reasonably conclude that the details of Edward Snowden's (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) dump of National Security Agency documents remains substantially unknown.
This
is ostensibly the thinking of three-time Oscar-winner Oliver Stone
(for Platoon and Born on the Fourth of July) in turning the story
into a cloak-and-dagger drama about the NSA
whistleblower-turned-fugitive's leak of classified information before
going into hiding from the U.S. government. The movie unfolds in June
of 2013 in the Hong Kong hotel room where
Snowden met with
journalists Glenn Greenwald (Zachary Quinto) and Ewen Macaskill (Tom
Wilkinson) along with Laura Poitras (Melissa Leo), the eventual
director of Citizenfour.
We
learn that following four days of interviews, Greenwald published his
first story in the British daily newspaper, The Guardian. The
Pulitzer Prize-winning series related in stunning detail the extent
of NSA surveillance of American citizens in direct contradiction of a
recent denial uttered under oath to Congress by James Clapper, the
nation's Director of National Intelligence.
Because
the articles identified Snowden as the source of the information, he
immediately became the subject of an intense international manhunt.
He somehow managed to slip through the dragnet and boarded a
commercial airliner bound for Moscow, despite the fact that his
passport had been revoked and the U.S. had requested his extradition
from Hong Kong.
Upon landing in Russia, Edward was awarded temporary asylum and he has languished there ever since. Lucky for him, this movie has revived interest in his case, inspiring him to recently make a public appeal for clemency.
But
a presidential pardon is unlikely to be forthcoming, even though
President Obama considered the apprehension of the "29 year
old-hacker" a very low priority back in June of '13. So today,
Snowden remains a fugitive from justice charged in absentia with
theft, espionage and conversion of government property.
Via
a variety of empathetic flashbacks, we are informed by the film that
Edward was a high school dropout who suffers from epilepsy. He also
enjoys a very loving, enduring relationship with Lindsay Mills
(Shailene Woodley), the loyal girlfriend who followed him from
Virginia to Hawaii to Moscow. More importantly, the movie establishes
Edward as so patriotic he was willing to jeopardize his future to
sound the alarm about the surreptitious NSA's widespread violations
of our Constitutional rights.
Congrats
to Oliver Stone for crafting a reverential biopic which convincingly
repositions a supposed traitor as an altruistic hero of the highest
order.
Excellent (3.5 stars)
Rated R for profanity, sexuality and nudity
in English and
Russian with subtitles
Running time: 135 minutesDistributor: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack Extras: Deleted scenes; "Finding the Truth" featurette; and a Q&A with Edward Snowden. .
To see a trailer for Snowden, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlSAiI3xMh4
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