What it’s like to turn the camera on Snowden and Assange – PBS NewsHour

JUDY WOODRUFF: Now to another in our Brief But Spectacular series, where we ask people to describe their passions.

Tonight, we hear from Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras. Her latest film is Risk, which looks at WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.

LAURA POITRAS, Documentary Filmmaker: Its a bit surprising that I do documentaries, because I consider myself to be a really shy person.

And theres something about the documentary form that I guess it sort of it kind of gives you an invitation, maybe, to go places you wouldnt go otherwise or to take risks you wouldnt take otherwise.

My filmmaking is kind of comes in a tradition of observational cinema or cinema verite. Legendary founders of it is D.A. Pennebaker, Albert Maysles, Frederick Wiseman. They capture human stories. They capture drama, and they capture history as it unfolds.

When you talk to people and who they tell you who they are is oftentimes different than their actions. And so Im interested in peoples actions and choices.

So, for instance, sitting in a hotel room with Edward Snowden, as hes making this monumental decision to leak this information, is an example of the type of cinema that Im interested in doing.

The last two films I have done, Citizenfour and Risk, I became a participant. There were things that were happening that were happening because of work that I was doing, reporting on the NSA.

I mean, if you expose the deepest levels of intelligence agencies, they do tend to pay attention to what youre doing. I was placed on a government terrorist watch list in 2006, and was detained at the U.S. border for probably 50 times, interrogated. I have had computers confiscated. I have had notebooks photocopied.

They have subpoenaed my records. They would send FBI agents to my film screenings to see what I said in Q&As.

MAN: Theres a filmmaker named Laura Poitras. Laura Poitras is known through the defense community as a documentary filmmaker who is anti-U.S.

LAURA POITRAS: I became really interested in WikiLeaks and Julian Assange in 2010, like a lot of people, first when they published the video of Collateral Murder, the Apache helicopter footage that showed killings of Iraqis, by U.S. military.

And having made a film about the war in Iraq, I knew that this was the kind of thing that was happening every day there. I reached out to WikiLeaks and Assange during that time and then started filming in 2011.

And I was interested in how they were changing journalism. I had somewhat of a falling out with him over the film, where he wanted me not to use scenes in the film.

One of the scenes that Julian wanted removed from the film is the scene where his lawyers are giving him advice about how to speak publicly of around these allegations of sexual assault.

JULIAN ASSANGE, Founder, WikiLeaks: Its just a thoroughly tawdry, radical, feminist, political positioning thing. Its some stereotype.

LAURA POITRAS: I still have enormous respect for, like, the project of WikiLeaks and its importance, because I think they have done extraordinary publishing.

Im always interested in access. Like you know, like, I would love to have access to Robert Muellers investigation into Donald Trump, or James Comey.

But I think those are going to be pretty tough to get access to that. But, yes, Im really looking forward to like the really good documentary thats capturing whats happening right now in our politics.

I hope its being documented by someone.

My name is Laura Poitras, and this is my brief take on documentary filmmaking.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And you can watch additional Brief But Spectacular episodes at pbs.org/newshour/brief.

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What it's like to turn the camera on Snowden and Assange - PBS NewsHour

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