Toronto Star

Five things about new biopic ‘Snowden’ from the star and director

-

What Oliver Stone knows about the National Security Agency’s (NSA) top secret surveillan­ce operations “is haunting,” the director told a Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival press conference and is evidence “the world is really out of control.”

Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who plays Edward Snowden in a forthcomin­g biopic about the NSA whistleblo­wer, is no less disturbed by the U.S. government’s power to surreptiti­ously spy on the world, but is more optimistic about the future of privacy.

Here are five things Stone and Gordon-Levitt shared about their interactio­ns with the privacy crusader and the process of making “Snowden,” which hits theatres Sept. 16: On snowden’s patriotism “He really was doing what he did out of a sincere love for his country and the principles the country was founded on,” said Gordon-Levitt, who admitted he knew little about Snowden before Stone approached him to take on the role.

“I think it shows two different kinds of patriotism. There’s the kind where you’re allegiant to your country no matter what and you don’t ask any questions. But there’s another kind of patriotism — that is what I really wanted to show in this character — which is the kind of patriotism that he grows into over the course of the nine years that you see in this story, where he does ask questions and that’s the privilege of being from a free country like the United States of America.” On stone’s interest in the story “This is really a secret underworld and no one in the NSA has come forward in its 70-year history,” Stone said.

“We only saw a sliver until Ed Snowden. No one saw into that thing, so it’s really an undercover detective story. And for me it’s exciting because it’s like JFK, it goes into something that we don’t know. Americans don’t know anything about it and they still don’t because it’s tricky.” On the future of privacy “Unfortunat­ely, Edward Snowden has warned us, more than once, about privacy and he said very clearly it’ll creep up and he says in the movie the next generation won’t know what privacy is,” Stone said.

“I grew up in a world that this never could’ve happened, I believed. I read George Orwell, never thought it could happen, and from 2001 on, it’s been very clear that something radical has changed. And you know me, I think there’s more to it than meets the eye, because whatever they tell you you’ve got to look beyond the surface of things.”

Gordon-Levitt said he’s hopeful that the public will demand more of their government­s and push back against encroachme­nts on privacy. Why people wilfully give up their privacy “Some people really like being as public as they can about everything they’re doing and they like sharing what they’re thinking, what they’re eating, what they’re wearing, what they’re doing, where they’re going and I, of course, think that’s everybody’s choice,” Gordon-Levitt said.

“I completely respect anybody’s desire to sort of turn their life into a performanc­e that way, if that’s their preferred form of expression. I just think it’s important that we all have the ability to make that choice.” What they hope happens to Snowden “There’s options,” Stonen said, “you know Mr. Obama could pardon him and we hope so. We hope Mr. Obama has a stroke of lightning and he sees the way. (But) he’s been one of the most efficient managers of this surveillan­ce world. (This is) the most extensive, invasive surveillan­ce state ever existed. He’s created it, built it up, big money, rockets 200 miles in space, satellites that are peeking in as we speak — ‘Hi Barack!’— so this is pretty serious.

“But he’s created this world, so rationally, it doesn’t figure. But we hope.”

Added Gordon-Levitt: “I know he would love to come home, I hope for that.”

 ?? COURTESY OF TIFF ?? Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as NSA whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden.
COURTESY OF TIFF Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as NSA whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden.
 ?? GALIT RODAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Director Oliver Stone, left, and actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt worked together on the Snowden biopic.
GALIT RODAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Director Oliver Stone, left, and actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt worked together on the Snowden biopic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada