Tag: oliver stone
Edward Snowden Emerges As A Film Star

Edward Snowden Emerges As A Film Star

By Steven Zeitchik, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Depending on your point of view (or maybe on whether you’re Neil Patrick Harris), Edward Snowden’s actions could be read very differently: The former NSA contractor is either, in the end, a dangerous traitor or a laudable hero.

It’s that split that makes the 32-year-old a compelling — and increasingly popular — cinematic figure. That popularity is demonstrated by the doc phenomenon CitizenFour this season, and now by Snowden, the new Oliver Stone drama that recently began production in Europe with Joseph Gordon Levitt in the title role and Zachary Quinto as muckraking journalist Glenn Greenwald.

How Snowden’s decision to leak scores of documents about national surveillance should be interpreted is one of the key moral mysteries of the national security debate, and hardly a clear matter even for some of those telling his story.

“I’m endlessly fascinated by Snowden’s decision, his process, his motivation,” Quinto told Movies Now. “The vast majority of accounts had it one way or another — he’s either one more traitor or a righteous whistleblower. And the question is, which one is it? Or maybe it’s something more complicated than that.”

Contemporary news figures in the Snowden vein can make for some weak cinematic sauce (see: Julian Assange movie The Fifth Estate in 2012). Perhaps it’s that we grow tired of the cult-of-personality aspects of the story; maybe we’re just worn out by all the cable-news volleying.

But Snowden is proving resistant to the rule. CitizenFour, in which Laura Poitras offers an unusually intimate look at Snowden and Greenwald in the now-famous Hong Kong hotel room where documents were leaked, scored best documentary at the Oscars on Sunday, notched strong ratings in its initial airing on HBO last month and was one of the highest-grossing documentaries of 2014 when distributor Radius released it in theaters.

Sony, meanwhile, has bought the rights to Greenwald’s book No Place to Hide in the hope of making its own movie, and has set James Bond producer Barbara Broccoli for the project, though whether it still moves forward in the wake of Stone’s take is an open question.

Stone’s Snowden — which is backed by a group of U.S and European companies and will be released by Open Road in December — has plenty going for it. The film features an all-star supporting cast that includes Melissa Leo, Tom Wilkinson, Nicolas Cage, and Shailene Woodley, and takes matters beyond the hotel room setting of CitizenFour to the sanctuary Snowden sought in Russia. Basically it’s about the battle for freedom (for him) and for extradition and prosecution (for the U.S. government).

To tell the tale, the director and producing partner Moritz Borman have acquired the rights to several books, including Luke Harding’s The Snowden Files, a Guardian reporter’s look at the pursuit of Snowden as the story was boiling over in the summer of 2013.

As of last month, Quinto had yet to reach out to Greenwald, though he was hoping to do so soon. The actor, who said he was mesmerized by CitizenFour, said he hasn’t made up his mind about Snowden’s actions, but did say that “from his writings, his intellect is indisputable, and it’s clear he has a thoughtfulness and a foresight and a meticulous attention to detail.”

Snowden himself, meanwhile, has emerged from the shadows somewhat as his cinema star has risen. He even weighed in on Harris’ now-infamous “for some treason” joke at the Oscars.

“To be honest, I laughed at NPH. I don’t think it was meant as a political statement, but even if it was, that’s not so bad,” he said in a Reddit Q&A on Tuesday. “My perspective is if you’re not willing to be called a few names to help out your country, you don’t care enough.” (Greenwald was less amused.)

There’s a long tradition of great whistleblower movies, from On the Waterfront to The Insider to Michael Clayton. Some of the best involve journalists (see: All the President’s Men). And Greenwald’s the journalist you want for your big-screen take. He’s a personality in bold colors (try watching CitizenFour without forming a definitive opinion of him) and his backstory has plenty of layers, as revealed even by small glimpses of he and partner David Miranda in Brazil, where the couple lives. And Stone can open the story up to new places and scenes that a documentary like CitizenFour, without the luxury of re-enactments, lacks the ability to do.

Still, can a big-budget globe-trotting thriller, usually forced to choose between hero and villain, capture a complicated figure like Snowden? Key to that might be finding the right amount of internal conflict and ambiguity. And though Stone’s politics are often well, unambiguous, he’s a figure who’s surprised in recent years with movies like World Trade Center and a hardly cut-and-dried critique of the financial crisis in Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps.

Quinto added that, despite both those expectations and the stream of coverage on Snowden specifically, he believed there’s a need for the new film. “I think our movie will open things up in a different way and shine a light on other perspectives,” he said.

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Image: AFP

Snowden’s Lawyer Sells Film Rights To Hollywood Director

Snowden’s Lawyer Sells Film Rights To Hollywood Director

Moscow (AFP) – Hollywood director Oliver Stone has acquired movie rights to a political thriller penned by U.S. whistle-blower Edward Snowden’s Russian lawyer, the pro-Kremlin attorney said on Wednesday.

“The rights to my book have been handed over to Oliver Stone and producer Moritz Borman,” Anatoly Kucherena told AFP.

“He (Stone) met with me, he did not meet with Snowden. The book will be published later.”

Kucherena is completing a potboiler dubbed the “Time of the Octopus” which tells the story of a U.S. whistle-blower and is loosely based on Snowden’s experiences.

One of Russia’s most high-profile lawyers, Kucherena was among a select group of public figures granted a meeting with the U.S. fugitive during his month-long stay at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport last year.

The lawyer, seen as close to the Kremlin, helped Snowden receive temporary asylum in Russia and has since acted as his spokesman and link to the outside world.

U.S. filmmaker Stone, a trenchant critic of the American political establishment, has also purchased the movie rights to another book about Snowden written by Luke Harding of The Guardian, one of the newspapers that originally published the whistle-blower’s leaks.

The newspaper said in early June that the Oscar-winning director had begun writing the screenplay, and that filming is set to start before the end of the year.

Snowden flew to Russia from Hong Kong last year after leaking a series of U.S. intelligence secrets. His U.S. passport has been revoked.

Many believe he lives in a closely-guarded compound that belongs to Russia’s security service although this has never been officially confirmed.

Washington says Snowden is welcome to return home but only to face trial for releasing top secret information it says has aided U.S. enemies.

Kucherena said earlier this month that Snowden was seeking to extend his refugee status in Russia.

Photo via Flickr