From Corrupt Hummingbird, 10 Years ago, written in Plain Text.
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  1. Saw this last night - an obvious must-watch for all CPunks. I think it was
  2. probably the most important documentary film of all time. As Roger Ebert
  3. said, "it’s as if Daniel Ellsberg had a friend with a movie camera who
  4. filmed his disclosure of the Pentagon Papers every step of the way. Or if
  5. the Watergate burglars had taken along a filmmaker who shot their crimes
  6. and the cover-up that followed. Except that the issues “Citizenfour” deals
  7. with are, arguably, a thousand times more potent than Vietnam or
  8. Watergate." Truly, this is the Snowden story we have been waiting for since
  9. 2013.
  10.  
  11. The main revelation of the film, however, is what an incredible boob Glenn
  12. Greenwald is. I had some idea of this after seeing him give an extremely
  13. disappointing talk earlier this year, but I don't think I quite understood
  14. how useless this guy really is. He's constantly asking the wrong questions,
  15. displays a technical ineptness (to the point of deliberate ignorance) that
  16. obviously hampers the journalism, and at very step shows a very clear
  17. desire to keep the document cache to himself for careerist purposes. At one
  18. point Ewen MacAskill brings up the idea of there being a Wikileaks-esque
  19. document explorer, and Ed says that this would be the best outcome for the
  20. documents, and Greenwald quickly dismisses the idea to talk about his
  21. publishing schedule. I still have immense respect for him, but I found it
  22. very frustrating and quite cringey to watch him treat the whole event in
  23. news-cycle terms, while everybody around him is obviously thinking in
  24. historical context. For instance, there is a moment when they are prepping
  25. for Ed's first on-camera interview and he asks the reporters how much
  26. background he should give about himself, and they give different answers.
  27. Poitras asks for as much detail as possible, and Greenwald basically says
  28. that isn't important, just be short so we get a good soundbite.
  29.  
  30. More importantly, I think the film also misses an opportunity to talk about
  31. *power*. This is something Edward himself has addressed, but it isn't
  32. really covered in Greenwald's reporting or books, and the only time it's
  33. mentioned in the film is when Jacob Appelbaum, while speaking before a
  34. European council of some sort, quite astutely comments that surveillance
  35. and control are one and the same. I think the film should probably have
  36. spent another hour or so investigating, naming and confronting those who
  37. profit from that control. Other than a few choice C-SPAN snippets, the
  38. enemy is completely faceless, which plays well for the pervading sense
  39. paranoia which envelops the film, but also leaves many questions unasked.
  40. Perhaps that's left as an exercise for the viewer, but I think the general
  41. take-away message from both the reporting and to a slightly lesser extent
  42. the film is that any "solution" will be token reform of policy and not
  43. dismantlement of power structures.
  44.  
  45. Also, very nice of the Russian government to let Ed have his girlfriend
  46. back. I didn't know that had happened, and it gives a rather unexpected
  47. happy ending to a film which otherwise made me want to cry desperately.
  48.  
  49. Anyway, I'd be very interested to hear what you lot thought of it. (JY, you
  50. should throw a torrent up ASAP! I'm sure people will be screenshotting and
  51. analyzing all of the new document shots the film contains.)
  52.  
  53. R