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

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 Snowden

Edward Snowden Film By Oliver Stone Acquired By Open Road

EXCLUSIVE: Open Road Films has acquired U.S.distribution rights to the untitled Oliver Stone-directed film that will star Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Edward Snowden, the American who fled to Russia seeking asylum after making public more classified documents than anyone since Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War. Im told that Stone and producing partner Moritz Borman will make this deal as soon as today, partly because of the job that Open Road head Tom Ortenberg did in championing the release of the Stone-directed George W. Bush film W while he was at Lionsgate.

The deal follows one earlier today in which French sales agent-distributor-producer Wild Bunch acquired international rights to sell on a film that Stone begins shooting late January in Munich. Snowden has been a hot-button topic in town the documentary Citizenfour premiered at the New York Film Festival. Right around then, studio heads began reading a script by Stone that Ive heard is one of his stronger efforts, about a leaker some call gutsy while others call a traitor. Borman produces with Eric Kopeloff.

Deadline revealed in September that Gordon-Levitt would play Snowden. He most recently completed playing Philippe Petit in the Robert Zemeckis-directed The Long Walk for TriStar and he is now shooting Xmas with Seth Rogen at Sony.

Stone and Borman got into the Snowden film by making a deal with his Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, for film rights to his novel Time Of The Octopus. That is the basis for the story of an American whistleblower who heads to Russia and the back and forth between the leaker and his lawyer as he waits while that country considers his request for asylum. Stone and Borman also bought the screen rights to The Snowden Files: The Inside Story Of The Worlds Most Wanted Man, a book by Guardian journalist Luke Harding thats published by Guardian Faber. It is unknown at this point whether Snowden himself has any direct input.

CAA brokered the deal.

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Edward Snowden Film By Oliver Stone Acquired By Open Road

Oliver Stone’s Edward Snowden Film Acquired By Wild Bunch

French sales agent-distributor-producer Wild Bunch has acquired international rights to sell Oliver Stones untitled Edward Snowden pic starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the title role.The project, currently in pre-production, starts principal photography in January in Munich.

As previously reported by Deadline,Snowdens Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, sold film rights to his upcoming novel Time Of The Octopus to Stone and longtime producing partner Moritz Borman. Stone is using the novel as well asLuke Hardings The Snowden Files: The Inside Story OfThe Worlds Most Wanted Manas sources for the screenplay.

Stone is pipping Sonys rival Snowden pic to the starting line. That studioacquired film rights to Pulitzer-winning journalist Glenn Greenwaldsupcoming bookNo Place To Hide: Edward Snowden, The NSA, And The U.S. Surveillance State. The movieis set tobe produced by Michael G Wilsonand Barbara Broccoli, producers of the James Bondspy franchise.

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Oliver Stone’s Edward Snowden Film Acquired By Wild Bunch

Encryption will let police communicate without ‘the bad guys’ listening in

Four Alle-Kiski Valley police departments went off the public air waves Thursday as they tested radio transmissions that don't allow the public to listen in on police responding to everything from a simple traffic stop to a shooting.

In the past year, Upper Burrell police approached other police departments on the same radio frequency for police communications Arnold, Lower Burrell and New Kensington after they heard their own radio transmissions at crime scenes.

Technology has passed up law enforcement in the communications world, said Upper Burrell police Chief Ken Pate.

Officer safety is driving these police departments to keep their radio chatter private through encryption, a process that jumbles the messages to those listening outside of the police stations, including the public, fire companies and ambulances.

For decades, anyone who bought a police scanner could listen to police radio transmissions. But more people are now able to listen in on police calls via free computers apps that allow Internet-connected cellphones and laptops to hear emergency dispatching transmissions.

Pate was prompted to block public access to his police radio transmissions when he responded to a domestic violence call last year.

Pate said that when he went to interview the victim's mother and broadcast an alert to be on the lookout for the assailant I could hear my own voice echoing back from the kitchen.

Pate says such information allows criminals to potentially know police whereabouts during a crime.

Currently, there are no plans on how police will alert the public and the media about police actions in their towns.

Those with police scanners will not be able to listen in once the encryption program takes effect. It is still in the testing phase.

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Encryption will let police communicate without ‘the bad guys’ listening in

ShadowCrypt research project shows encryption approach

14 hours ago by Nancy Owano

A team of researchers from UC Berkeley and University of Maryland believe they have come up with a previously unexplored design point, ShadowCrypt, that enables encrypted input/output without trusting any part of the web applications. That means they are suggesting a tool that can bring simple encrypted messaging to webmail and social networking sites. That means you could send and receive encrypted text on Facebook and Twitter. MIT Technology Review refers to it as a prototype browser extension, where the site operator or anyone intercepting the posting sees only a garbled string of letters and numbers. The researchers, in their paper, "ShadowCrypt: Encrypted Web Applications for Everyone," prepared for presentation at the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, discussed the chokepoint in their design.

"This chokepoint encrypts data before the application code (including the client-side code) can access it. The application can only view an encrypted version of the data. This requires isolating the input and output fields while still providing the application access to the encrypted data. Choosing this chokepoint means that no application code is in the TCB. This leads to a system secure against attackers at the client-side as well as the server-side. It also gives the user complete control over the data. In contrast, previous proposals required trusting application developers to handle data in a privacy-preserving manner."

They implemented ShadowCrypt as a Google Chrome browser extension. The extension is available on the Chrome Store for anyone to try out; ShadowCrypt also has its own web site.

When you install the extension, said the team, you have a few keys set up by default. These are to see if everything is working correctly. "Encryption is great for small group collaboration," said the site. "You can share your encryption key to allow your collaborators to see what you've written." ShadowCrypt is developed and maintained by the WebBlaze team, called WebBlaze, from UC Berkeley and collaborators from University of Maryland. They are Warren He, Devdatta Akhawe, and Sumeet Jain, and Dawn Song from Berkeley, and Elaine Shi from the University of Maryland. The source code is on their GitHub repository.

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To put ShadowCrypt to work, explained Tom Simonite in MIT Technology Review, "you install the extension and then create encryption keys for each website you wish to use it with. A small padlock icon at the corner of every text box is the only indication that ShadowCrypt is hiding the garbled encrypted version that will be submitted when you hit the 'send' or 'post' button."

Discussing future work in their paper, the team said "We are currently working on supporting additional schemes that can work transparently," such as Format Preserving Encryption and Attribute-based Encryption. In the longer run, they said their aim is to support encryption schemes that rely on modifications to existing web applications to work, such as Searchable Encryption or Fully Homomorphic Encryption.

Explore further: MIT researchers develop Mylar a platform for building secure web applications

More information: http://www.technologyreview.com/news/ ages-on-any-website/

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ShadowCrypt research project shows encryption approach