- Saw this last night - an obvious must-watch for all CPunks. I think it was
- probably the most important documentary film of all time. As Roger Ebert
- said, "it’s as if Daniel Ellsberg had a friend with a movie camera who
- filmed his disclosure of the Pentagon Papers every step of the way. Or if
- the Watergate burglars had taken along a filmmaker who shot their crimes
- and the cover-up that followed. Except that the issues “Citizenfour” deals
- with are, arguably, a thousand times more potent than Vietnam or
- Watergate." Truly, this is the Snowden story we have been waiting for since
- 2013.
- The main revelation of the film, however, is what an incredible boob Glenn
- Greenwald is. I had some idea of this after seeing him give an extremely
- disappointing talk earlier this year, but I don't think I quite understood
- how useless this guy really is. He's constantly asking the wrong questions,
- displays a technical ineptness (to the point of deliberate ignorance) that
- obviously hampers the journalism, and at very step shows a very clear
- desire to keep the document cache to himself for careerist purposes. At one
- point Ewen MacAskill brings up the idea of there being a Wikileaks-esque
- document explorer, and Ed says that this would be the best outcome for the
- documents, and Greenwald quickly dismisses the idea to talk about his
- publishing schedule. I still have immense respect for him, but I found it
- very frustrating and quite cringey to watch him treat the whole event in
- news-cycle terms, while everybody around him is obviously thinking in
- historical context. For instance, there is a moment when they are prepping
- for Ed's first on-camera interview and he asks the reporters how much
- background he should give about himself, and they give different answers.
- Poitras asks for as much detail as possible, and Greenwald basically says
- that isn't important, just be short so we get a good soundbite.
- More importantly, I think the film also misses an opportunity to talk about
- *power*. This is something Edward himself has addressed, but it isn't
- really covered in Greenwald's reporting or books, and the only time it's
- mentioned in the film is when Jacob Appelbaum, while speaking before a
- European council of some sort, quite astutely comments that surveillance
- and control are one and the same. I think the film should probably have
- spent another hour or so investigating, naming and confronting those who
- profit from that control. Other than a few choice C-SPAN snippets, the
- enemy is completely faceless, which plays well for the pervading sense
- paranoia which envelops the film, but also leaves many questions unasked.
- Perhaps that's left as an exercise for the viewer, but I think the general
- take-away message from both the reporting and to a slightly lesser extent
- the film is that any "solution" will be token reform of policy and not
- dismantlement of power structures.
- Also, very nice of the Russian government to let Ed have his girlfriend
- back. I didn't know that had happened, and it gives a rather unexpected
- happy ending to a film which otherwise made me want to cry desperately.
- Anyway, I'd be very interested to hear what you lot thought of it. (JY, you
- should throw a torrent up ASAP! I'm sure people will be screenshotting and
- analyzing all of the new document shots the film contains.)
- R