The Edward Snowden Documentary Citizenfour Puts You Right in the Room As History Is Made

If you didnt know better, youd think that Laura Poitrass "Meet Edward Snowden" documentary Citizenfour was an avant-garde paranoid conspiracy thriller. Hold on, it is an avant-garde paranoid conspiracy thriller. It opens with a blurry tunnel; winking monitors scrolling metadata plucked from Americans emails; images of huge, futuristic, otherworldy government surveillance centers; encrypted communications flurries of characters that resolve into edgy cyberdialogues between the National Security Agency whistleblower and the filmmaker; and, finally, exacting exchanges between Snowden and journalist Glenn Greenwald high up in a blankly modern Hong Kong hotel, which might or might not be bugged. The music by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross is like malignantly buzzing wires that eat into your cerebral cortex.

The narrative is relatively straightforward. Poitras explains in voice-over that in the summer of 2013, she received a communiqu from a man calling himself Citizenfour, who also asked her to alert Greenwald of Britains Guardian newspaper. (Poitras doesnt tell us that Greenwald initially blew citizenfour off for whatever cranky reasons, but came into the fold when contacted by the documentarian.) What follows is an introduction (some of it via former metadata collector William Binney, who hobbles around on an impressive metallic leg) to all the ways in which the NSA intercepts hundreds of millions of communications from ordinary Americans and lies about it. Here is NSA head General James Clapper before Congress.

Senator Ron Wyden: Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans? Clapper: No, sir. Wyden: It does not? Clapper: Not wittingly. There are cases where they could inadvertently, perhaps, collect, but not wittingly.

On the evidence, he is witting as hell. And congresspersons among them the Dems own Nancy Pelosi allegedly knew the full extent of the NSAs reach.

A password is established for Poitras to contact a person playing with a Rubiks Cube. Then were in a Hong Kong hotel room with the man himself: I am Edward Snowden Ed, he says. He is an employee of Booz Allen on loan to the NSA. He can no longer, he avers, bear the lying of his government. (Poitras does not explore his motives more deeply than that.) He explains the breadth of the classified documents he has stolen, most from the NSA, some from a possibly even more invasive British program with the cute name Tempora. (It would have been even cuter as Yack-a-Tory.) Snowden gives The Guardian and other papers everything because, he says, he doesnt want to be the person to make the judgment on what should be released. Poitras doesnt probe that cosmic shrug, either.

The hotel scenes go on a tad long, but what holds us is that were right in the room as history is being made with the guy, the actual guy, soon to be notorious all over the world. Poitrass penetrating docs My Country, My Country and The Oath earned her a place in this room (she now lives in Berlin in an attempt to evade scrutiny), although she doesnt turn the camera on herself or talk much. Greenwald, for his part, isnt a particularly endearing interlocutor, though hes a fluid and effective spokesman in news programs that Poitras excerpts. Hes humanized when his partner, David Miranda, is detained by agents for nine hours at an airport, ironically without Miranda rights. When Miranda is finally released, Greenwalds relief is very moving.

We watch Snowden watch CNN break news of his massive document dump. Snowdens name is released immediately he knew secrecy would be impossible. U.S. agents dont waylay him, in part because he makes a beeline for the Russian embassy. Poitras doesnt quote his public testimonial to H.K.s spirited commitment to free speech and the right of public dissent, which would, at the moment, be cringeworthy. She really is very protective.

Citizenfour ends with a teasing scene in which Greenwald informs Snowden via scribbled notes the camera mostly doesnt see of another high-up whistle-blower. Snowden expresses concern for his or her safety. His eyebrows go up when he learns the extent of the revelations. The word POTUS is floated in a pointed peekaboo. Perhaps said revelations will be tied to the release of citizenfour, which will be the best kind of advertisement imaginable. You should see this movie if youre nave enough to think you have a right to privacy. But dont buy your ticket online or with a credit card.

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The Edward Snowden Documentary Citizenfour Puts You Right in the Room As History Is Made

Laura Poitras Explains How She Made Edward Snowden Doc ‘Citizenfour’ in Secret (Part 1)

Mon Oct 20 11:59:28 EDT 2014

In the first of a two-part interview, the director of this year's most daring non-fiction achievement explains how she pulled it off.

Daniel Bergeron "Citizenfour" director Laura Poitras

In "Citizenfour," documentarian Laura Poitras chronicles the Edward Snowden story from the inside out: Poitras was secretly contacted by the former NSA contractor in 2012 and met him in Hong Kong. Along with journalist Glenn Greenwald, she played a key role in announcing his revelations about the U.S. government's surveillance techniques to the world. Poitras' movie unfolds like a real-time thriller, tracking Snowden's anxieties on the brink of his global celebrity, as well as the aftermath. Now living with his girlfriend with a one-year work permit in Russia, Snowden remains an object of media scrutiny, but the story surrounding the materials he leaked to the public has grown much bigger than him. Poitras' movie tracks every beat of these historical events with a mixture of shock and excitement that has garnered rave reviews.

A few days after the movie's premiere at the New York Film Festival, the director sat down with Indiewire to discuss the challenges of developing her project in secret and developing a narrative that reflected her experiences. Stay tuned for the second half of our interview tomorrow, in which Poitras addresses the ramifications of Snowden's decision.

READ MORE: 'Citizenfour' is a Bracing Look at Former NSA Whistleblower's Impact

This movie makes you scared to record a conversation. But here we are.

It's actually funny, because literally every journalist has been like, "Do you mind if I turn this on?" Like it's not a given. That's why we're here! It's cool. Don't worry about it.

But did this project make you more paranoid about surveillance methods?

I don't call it that. I don't think being careful is being paranoid. I have good reason to believe my phone prints might be targeted. So I don't carry it with me in the editing room. That just seems like common sense, not paranoia.

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Laura Poitras Explains How She Made Edward Snowden Doc 'Citizenfour' in Secret (Part 1)

Terror suspect challenging NSA spying wants to know how US built his case

By SADIE GURMAN

The Associated Press

Published: October 20, 2014

DENVER A terror suspect challenging the constitutionality of the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance program wants prosecutors to reveal how they built their case against him.

In motions filed Monday in federal court in Denver, attorneys for Jamshid Muhtorov said they need to know about the government's surveillance methods so they can challenge their legality in court.

Attorneys want to know about each surveillance technique, when it was used and what evidence it yielded so they can determine whether investigators illegally gathered evidence against Muhtorov and co-defendant Bakhityor Jumaev, federal public defender Virginia Grady wrote in the filing.

The Muhtorov case touches on concerns raised by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden about the government's expanding spying practices. It was the first time the Justice Department disclosed that it would use information gained from one of the government's warrantless surveillance programs against an accused terrorist.

Muhtorov was accused in 2012 of providing material support to an Uzbek terrorist organization active in Afghanistan. The evidence against him consists largely of phone calls and Internet communications.

But defense attorneys say the government probably relied on other still-secret surveillance techniques in its investigations of Muhtorov and Jumaev. Grady said it's their constitutional right to know the facts.

The government's withholding of the information is keeping other defendants from challenging sweeping new forms of surveillance, she wrote.

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Terror suspect challenging NSA spying wants to know how US built his case

"Life, the Universe, and Everything" – E12: The FBI vs. Encryption – Video


"Life, the Universe, and Everything" - E12: The FBI vs. Encryption
Welcome to Life, the Universe, and Everything, your daily stream of consciousness resource. This is your captain speaking. Prepare for liftoff. http://www.youtube.com/matsterboylp http://www.youtube.com/628Icem ...

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