Joseph Gordon-Levitt Confirmed To Play Edward Snowden In Oliver Stone’s ‘The Snowden Files’

The talented actor will star as the former National Security Agency contractor in the Oliver Stone-directed movie.

The actor, writer and director Joseph Gordon-Levitt has been cast to play NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden in the Oliver Stone-directed flick 'The Snowden Files.' The 33 year-old star has been connected to the role since September, but the film's backers confirmed this casting news on Monday (11th).

Gordon-Levitt will portray Edward Snowden

According to Reuters, the controversial film, which will depict how the former National Security Agency contractor released classified documents concerning numerous global surveillance programs, will begin production in Munich in January.

Stone, who won the best director Oscar for 'Platoon,' has written the screenplay based on Guardian journalist Luke Harding's 'The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man,' and 'Time of the Octopus' by Snowden's lawyer Anatoly Kucherena.

More:Joseph Gordon-Levitt Reveals Why He Would "Absolutely" Call Himself a Feminist

Snowden garnered global attention after leaking thousands of classified d intelligence documents to the media in 2013, many of which were run by the NSA. He has been on the run ever since, and currently lives in an undisclosed location in Russia after being granted a three-year resident permit, which has created tension between the two nations.

Gordon-Levitt will be the first person to portray Snowden in a feature film, but most likely won't be the last as Sony Pictures acquired rights to Pulitzer-winning journalist Glenn Greenwald's book 'No Place To Hide: Edward Snowden, The NSA, And The U.S. Surveillance State.'

More:First Pictures Of Joseph Gordon-Levitt In 'The Walk'

The multitalented actor last starred in 'Sin City: A Dame To Kill For,' and will next be seen playing French high-wire artist Philippe Petit in the forthcoming biopic 'The Walk.'

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Joseph Gordon-Levitt Confirmed To Play Edward Snowden In Oliver Stone's 'The Snowden Files'

Tom Morello and M.I.A. Stump for Edward Snowden

M.I.A. is one of many big-name musicians to sign a Snowden support letter Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images

Who knew that all it would take to form a semi-musical supergroup with such artists asM.I.A.and Tom Morello was infamous whistleblower Edward Snowden and others like him? Quick refresher: Snowden is a 31-year-old American computer professional who leaked classified NSA documents last year, and has been in Russia ever since. In his honor, musicians including PJ Harvey, Thurston Moore, and Moby(and Pamela Anderson too, if you must know) have joined forces to support the Courage Foundation, which bills itself as "an international organisation that supports those who risk life or liberty to make significant contributions to the historical record."

In a recently released public statement, the musicians cosigned the following:

We stand in support of those fearless whistleblowers and publishers who risk their lives and careers to stand up for truth and justice. Thanks to the courage of sources like Daniel Ellsberg, Chelsea Manning, Jeremy Hammond, and Edward Snowden, the public can finally see for themselves the war crimes, corruption, mass surveillance, and abuses of power of the U.S. government and other governments around the world. WikiLeaks is essential for its fearless dedication in defending these sources and publishing their truths. These bold and courageous acts spark accountability, can transform governments, and ultimately make the world a better place.

In addition to urging the public to stand in solidarity with Snowden and other whistleblowers, many of the artists are calling on fans to watch CitizenFour, and are raising awareness of the Courage Foundations whistleblower defense efforts, which fundraises for the legal and public defense of whistleblowers and campaigns for the protection of truthtellers and the publics right to know generally.

Pitchfork also notes that Morello had a statement of his own to add to the release, which follows the Rage Against the Machine singer's Ferguson protest song from last month.

Those courageous enough to expose the crimes of government and unmask corruption embody the spirit of democracy and justice. Rather than being celebrated as the truth-tellers and champions of accountability that they are, they are persecuted and find themselves the target of a draconian legal system that punishes them for the act of exposing crimes.

We're hopeful that the musicians are hard at work on a Q4 answer to January's Rookie Mag supergroup anthem "Go Forth Feminist Warrior."

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Tom Morello and M.I.A. Stump for Edward Snowden

Celebrities offer support to Edward Snowden

Susan Sarandon, Pamela Anderson and Russell Brand have added their names to a petition encouraging donations to the Courage Foundation, which raises funds to pay for US whistleblower Edward Snowden's legal defence.

Snowden has been living in exile ever since he leaked classified intelligence from the National Security Agency (NSA) last year, prompting a major outcry about US mass surveillance and government secrecy, and debate concerning the balance between national security and information privacy.

He has been charged with two counts of violating the Espionage Act and theft of government property, and faces up to 30 years in prison.

Officials at the Courage Foundation are raising funds in an effort to help "patriots" and "heroes" like Snowden afford top legal counsel, and their latest push has been endorsed by more than 50 actors, musicians and intellectuals, who have also offered their support for Snowden.

Their latest initiative coincides with the expanded theatrical release of Laura Poitras' critically-acclaimed documentary CitizenFour, which chronicles Snowden's disclosure of the NSA's mass surveillance program.

Actor Viggo Mortensen, who is another celebrity signing up to help Snowden's cause, states, "It is up to all of us as free-thinking citizens to demand truly transparent democracy and high, unbiased moral standards from those who govern us. I hope everyone can chip in to support Snowden and those patriotic whistleblowers that come after him."

A new Courage Foundation statement, which has been signed by Sarandon, Brand, Anderson, Peter Sarsgaard, M.I.A., fashion designer Vivienne Westwood and moviemaker Alfonso Cuaron, among others, reads: "We stand in support of those fearless whistleblowers and publishers who risk their lives and careers to stand up for truth and justice."

Westwood adds, "I didn't ask Edward Snowden to stick his neck out for me. But now that he did I ask myself where would we be without him? The more that the public watches CitizenFour, which documents Edward Snowden's bravery in revealing the NSA's massive web of surveillance of the American people, opposition to the government's assault on civil liberties will grow.

"I hope that audiences will turn their outrage into action and donate to the Courage Foundation's Legal Defense Fund to provide legal representation to Snowden and other whistleblowers to counter the government's unprecedented attack against these brave men and women."

WENN.com

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Celebrities offer support to Edward Snowden

Oliver Stone’s Edward Snowden Film Fails to Find Major …

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Oliver Stone and Edward Snowden

Oliver Stone's untitled Edward Snowden film, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the NSA whistleblower, is going the indie route after failing to find a taker among the major Hollywood studios.

Open Road Filmsis picking up U.S. rights to the movie, while Wild Bunch is preselling foreign rights to international buyers at the American Film Market this week in Santa Monica. Earlier this month, the project was shopped to several Hollywood studios, but no deal materialized, according to insiders.

See more The 21 Best Movies About Whistleblowers

Sources say studios are nervous after DreamWorks' The Fifth Estate, about whistleblower Julian Assange, bombed at the box office in fall 2013 grossing just $8.6 million worldwide.

Open Road is no stranger to political films. It is also handling Jon Stewart's upcoming Rosewater in the U.S.

Stone's screenplay is based on Luke Harding's The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man and Time of the Octopus, the upcoming novel from Snowden's Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena. CAA is representing domestic rights.

Harding's nonfiction book traces Snowden's move from Hawaii to Hong Kong, where he met with documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras and journalist Glenn Greenwaldand handed over top-secret NSA documents. Snowden later flew to Moscow, where he sought asylum. Kucherena's fictional take on the story is based on the lawyer's time with Snowden while he waited in limbo at the Moscow airport before the Russian government decided to grant him asylum.

See more Surveillance Cinema: 14 Movies Featuring Big Brother

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UD student’s 9-foot Edward Snowden statue at DCCA

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) - When Business Insider wrote about University of Delaware graduate student Jim Dessicinos statue of Edward Snowden appearing in New Yorks Union Square Park last month, the reporter noted that none of the dozen passers-by they talked to could identify who the statue depicted.

For Dessicino, a 29-year-old Atlantic City, New Jersey, native, it could have been a blow to his confidence as an artist, having spent months creating the 9-foot, 220-pound figure out of gypsum cement, clay, steel and foam.

But just hours earlier when he was unloading the statue from a van to bring it to the Manhattan park, he heard a man on the bustling New York streets shout, Oh, my God! Is that Edward Snowden?

In a stroke of pure coincidence that is still hard to believe, that man happened to be with journalist/activist/blogger Glenn Greenwald, whose reporting last year in Britains The Guardian first disclosed the secret U.S. surveillance programs using leaked documents from Snowden, a former National Security Agency contractor.

The person most closely associated with Snowden, now living in Russia, just happened to be having breakfast with fellow journalist Jeremy Scahill at Coffee Shop restaurant when Dessicinos van pulled up and the super-sized Snowden popped out.

I thought, You have to be kidding me. I wasnt convinced it was him, but then I walked up to him and it was Glenn Greenwald, Dessicino says. And (Greenwald) was more confused than I was about all of this. He was dumbfounded, but really excited and happy to see it.

After the chance meeting, Scahill took a photo of Greenwald with the statue and posted it to Twitter, writing, So, @ggreenwald & I were having breakfast & a truck pulls up with a statue of Edward Snowden.

Greenwald, who lives in Brazil and was visiting New York to attend the premiere of the documentary Citizenfour at Lincoln Center that night, soon retweeted it.

The result was a hectic few hours for Dessicino, whose statue is currently greeting museum-goers at the entrance of the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts (200 S. Madison St., Wilmington) through Jan. 4. (The statue even has its own Twitter account: @EdSnowdenStatue.)

Reporters from publications like the New York Daily News, Vice and Buzzfeed descended on Union Square to report on the statue. As Dessicino did one interview after another, representatives from the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation soon arrived and told Dessicino he had to remove the statue since he didnt have a proper permit.

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UD student's 9-foot Edward Snowden statue at DCCA

Berlins digital exiles: where tech activists go to escape the NSA

Laura Poitras on the roof of Archimedes Exhibitions in Berlin. Poitras moved to Berlin to escape the attentions of the US security services. Photograph: Malte Jaeger for the Observer

Its the not knowing thats the hardest thing, Laura Poitras tells me. Not knowing whether Im in a private place or not. Not knowing if someones watching or not. Though shes under surveillance, she knows that. It makes working as a journalist hard but not impossible. Its on a personal level that its harder to process. I try not to let it get inside my head, but I still am not sure that my home is private. And if I really want to make sure Im having a private conversation or something, Ill go outside.

Poitrass documentary about Edward Snowden, Citizenfour, has just been released in cinemas. She was, for a time, the only person in the world who was in contact with Snowden, the only one who knew of his existence. Before she got Glenn Greenwald and the Guardian on board, it was just her talking, electronically, to the man she knew only as Citizenfour. Even months on, when I ask her if the memory of that time lives with her still, she hesitates and takes a deep breath: It was really very scary for a number of months. I was very aware that the risks were really high and that something bad could happen. I had this kind of responsibility to not fuck up, in terms of source protection, communication, security and all those things, I really had to be super careful in all sorts of ways.

Bad, not just for Snowden, I say? Not just for him, she agrees. Were having this conversation in Berlin, her adopted city, where shed moved to make a film about surveillance before shed ever even made contact with Snowden. Because, in 2006, after making two films about the US war on terror, she found herself on a watch list. Every time she entered the US and I travel a lot she would be questioned. It got to the point where my plane would land and they would do whats called a hard stand, where they dispatch agents to the plane and make everyone show their passport and then I would be escorted to a room where they would question me and oftentimes take all my electronics, my notes, my credit cards, my computer, my camera, all that stuff. She needed somewhere else to go, somewhere she hoped would be a safe haven. And that somewhere was Berlin.

Whats remarkable is that my conversation with Poitras will be the first of a whole series of conversations I have with people in Berlin who either are under surveillance, or have been under surveillance, or who campaign against it, or are part of the German governments inquiry into it, or who work to create technology to counter it. Poitrass experience of understanding the sensation of what its like to know youre being watched, or not to know but feel a prickle on the back of your neck and suspect you might be, is far from unique, it turns out. But then, perhaps more than any other city on earth, Berlin has a radar for surveillance and the dark places it can lead to.

There is just a very real historical awareness of how information can be used against people in really dangerous ways here, Poitras says. There is a sensitivity to it which just doesnt exist elsewhere. And not just because of the Stasi, the former East German secret police, but also the Nazi era. Theres a book Jake Appelbaum talks a lot about thats called IBM and the Holocaust and it details how the Nazis used punch-cards to systemise the death camps. Were not talking about that happening with the NSA [the US National Security Agency], but it shows how this information can be used against populations and how it poses such a danger.

Jake Jacob Appelbaum is an American who helped develop the anonymous Tor network, and went on to work with WikiLeaks. Hes also in Berlin, having discovered that he was the subject of a secret US grand jury investigation, and it was he who advised Poitras to come here. Id been filming him doing this extraordinary work training activists in anti-surveillance techniques in the Middle East and I asked him where I should go, because I just didnt think I could keep my footage safe in the US. And he said Germany because of its privacy laws. And Berlin because of all the groups doing anti-surveillance work here.

Peoples reactions in Germany to the Snowden revelations differed to those in Britain or America. There was full-on national outrage when it was revealed that even chancellor Angela Merkels phone had been bugged. I know this already, vaguely, in theory, but its a different matter to actually come to Berlin and hear person after person talk about it. I start out with three names, three high-profile digital exiles who have all taken refuge in the city: Poitras, Appelbaum and Sarah Harrison, another WikiLeaker who was with Snowden during his time in transit in Sheremetyevo airport near Moscow and helped him apply for political asylum in 21 countries. But I end up with reams of others. And, I cant help thinking that Berlin, the city that found itself at the frontline of so much of the 20th centurys history, has found itself, once again, on the fracture point between two opposing world orders. And I wonder if the people I meet are the start of the internet fightback; if Berlin really is becoming a hub for a global digital resistance movement.

Is that too fanciful a word, I ask Martin Kaul, the social movements editor of Berlins most radical newspaper, Die Tageszeitung, or Taz as its known and if anyone is in a position to know, its him (he is the only social movements editor hes ever come across, he tells me). Is it a movement? Kaul ums and ahs a bit at first, especially about the idea of the city as a harbour for digital exiles, a concept Id first heard in a talk Julian Assange gave at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, earlier this year.

They are very high profile, the exiles, he says, but I dont think there are hundreds of them here, or even dozens. Id be interested to know if they are growing. But, what is true is that there were already many very influential groups here. Hacker culture is especially strong in Germany. There were a lot of people already working on these issues. And then the exiles arrived. They are like an international avant garde at the cutting edge of it.

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Berlins digital exiles: where tech activists go to escape the NSA

Oliver Stone’s Edward Snowden Film Fails to Find Major Studio Home – Video


Oliver Stone #39;s Edward Snowden Film Fails to Find Major Studio Home
Oliver Stone #39;s untitled Edward Snowden film, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the NSA whistleblower, is going the indie route after failing to find a taker among the major Hollywood studios....

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Oliver Stone's Edward Snowden Film Fails to Find Major Studio Home - Video

Dropbox’s Drew Houston Responds To Snowden’s Privacy Criticism: It’s A Trade Off – Video


Dropboxs Drew Houston Responds To Snowdens Privacy Criticism: Its A Trade Off
NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden caused a flurry of controversy when he advised consumers to get rid of Dropbox if they want to protect their privacy. Today, Drew Houston, CEO of the...

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Dropbox’s Drew Houston Responds To Snowden’s Privacy Criticism: It’s A Trade Off - Video

‘Citizenfour’s’ Berlin premiere puts new spin on Edward …

Since it premiered at the New York Film Festival last month, Laura Poitras Citizenfour, about the dramatic life and choices of Edward Snowden, has been something of a strange bird. To the (somewhat self-selected) group that's seen or taken a keen interest in it, it's been one of the most important and brave movies of the year, a film that brings home in a chilling way our current all-too-true narrative of surveillance. To many others, it's passed by unremarkably. To that group, the film is a blip, either making them wonder why we're talking about Snowden again or, for the more engagedly skeptical, why were glorifying a traitor.

Not insignificantly, the film, which opened in U.S. theaters two weeks ago, has also confounded some of the usual political divides. People who tilt decidedly right-libertarian have embraced it, as have people who tilt decidedly left-liberal -- its criticisms of big government and security hawkishness play, respectively, to each side. But those closer to the middle have struggled with it, and certainly the D.C. establishment has been discomfited by Snowden in general; you wont find Ari Fleischer and Barack Obama in the same movie very often, much less agreeing.

Watching Citizenfour a second time at the Berlin premiere Wednesday night, though, had a different effect. Both the policy and the politics of it fell away. It became clearer what the movies appeal was, how that appeal worked and ultimately, perhaps, where it can take the film.

The backstory to Citizenfour is a homegrown one. Poitras moved to Berlin several years ago and cut the film here, immersing the producers and editors she worked with in her world for over a year. There were so many local crew and helpers on stage with her after the screening Wednesday that I lost count (probably about 35). This city is also, for a mix of reasons, ground zero for the pro-Snowden movement.

But it wasnt politics that shone through Wednesday night. At the New York screening, I was taken with the import of what Snowden was doing, running through what I knew about the story and comparing the new information to what I already knew, how it fleshed out or contradicted that. In more reflective moments I thought about the issues -- the vast surveillance machine and what it means.

A second viewing operated differently. It made me see why Snowden was so compelling to so many in the first place, regardless of the position one takes on him or the National Security Agency. For all of his, and Poitras, grand ambition to change how we think about government, the films neat trick is that it works most at a human level -- which may be why (beyond the self-selection) those who see it come away with warm feelings toward its main character.

As he lays out the stakes and describes the NSAs activities, Snowden reminds that it is not my story ... but everyones story. Yet the movie is, indeed, very much his story. Watching him take the action he does -- walk away from a lucrative career and a nice life at the age of 29 because of an ideal -- makes us wonder if we would do the same, no matter the particular context. Its a kind of aspirational viewing, a rooting for someone because he does the thing wed like to think wed do but suspect we might not.

That may be one reason the interest in Snowden personally has been so high, and why the seemingly after-the-fact detail in the film that his girlfriend, Lindsay Mills, is living with him in Moscow has been so touted. You see, that closing moment seems to be saying, you can walk away from it all and still have a happy life. At the screening Poitras said that the last time she talked to Snowden, in September, he was in a good state of mind. It drew a relieved and appreciative reaction from the audience.

The German lens is a particularly interesting one through which to view "Citizenfour." The fact that popular Chancellor Angela Merkel is the closest thing the film has to a governmental hero enhances its standing, as does the countrys very recent history with rampant spying (albeit of the lower-tech version) via the Stasi. There was a pointed quality to the movie being shown in the Kino International, the old East German, silver-curtained theater where high-ranking members of the GDR used to gather for screenings. This is a movie theater more associated with government surveillance than almost any other in the Western world, and yet on its screen Snowden was battling against just that -- fitting" Poitras noted before the screening.

This film has long been lauded as a kind of great documentary hope, transcending the many other nonfiction stories that have found their way onto TV (and Netflix and other platforms) in recent years. The jury is still out. The packed handful of U.S. theaters in Week 1 became a much sparser couple dozen theaters in Week 2. If "Citizenfour" does catch on, though, its aspirational quality might have a lot to do with it. Ditto for the academy, which is widely thought to be faced with a choice between this film and the Roger Ebert movie Life Itself for the year's best documentary. The two might be different in a lot of ways, but in our identification with a central character, and the feeling the film leaves of wanting to lead a life much like the one we're watching, they're not all that dissimilar.

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'Citizenfour's' Berlin premiere puts new spin on Edward ...