The Borneo Post

‘Risk’ offers candid, unsettling portrait of WikiLeaks founder Assange

- By Ann Hornaday

“RISK” is an infuriatin­g film on many levels. A startlingl­y intimate portrait of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange that spans seven years — during which he goes from house arrest in rural England to claiming asylum at the Ecuadoran Embassy in London to releasing a damaging cache of hacked emails at a pivotal point during last year’s presidenti­al election — the film is guaranteed to stir up strong feelings among Assange supporters and skeptics alike.

On another, more meta plane, “Risk” raises some disquietin­g questions about the process of documentar­y filmmaking itself, as director Laura Poitras places herself squarely in the middle of ethical issues that throw the entire enterprise into question.

Poitras, who won an Oscar in 2015 for “Citizenfou­r,” a riveting portrait of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, takes a similarly up-close-andpersona­l approach to her subject in “Risk,” which begins in 2010, when Assange is living in Norfolk, England, trying to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden, where he is wanted for questionin­g regarding accusation­s of sexual assault.

As the movie opens, he and WikiLeaks section editor Sarah Harrison are working the phones, trying to warn the US State Department about the impending release of unredacted diplomatic cables. With a combinatio­n of naivete and hubris that will become gratingly familiar over the course of the film, Assange and Harrison try to get thenSecret­ary of State Hillary Clinton on the phone, with Assange at one point telling a low-level State Department employee that “I don’t have a problem, you have a problem.”

Of course, they get nowhere. But the foreshadow­ing has been put in place in a narrative that marches toward its election-year climax with almost novelistic inevitabil­ity. Like “Citizenfou­r,” “Risk” unfolds in verite-style encounters, while Assange consults with his mostly female team of attorneys, holds spin meetings with the WikiLeaks staff, plots legal and publicity strategies and, at one point, has his hair cut while watching a Kpop video as his adoring minions look on with awed smiles.

What emerges from these sessions isn’t terribly different from the depiction Alex Gibney provided in his jaundiced 2013 WikiLeaks documentar­y “We Steal Secrets.” As in that film, Assange is shown here to be a self-dramatisin­g, purposeful­ly enigmatic figure who, regardless of vaunted rhetoric about principles and praxis, often seems compromise­d by the same moral arrogance and unaccounta­bility he decries in his opponents. At the film’s most surreal moment, by which time Assange has claimed asylum in London, Lady Gaga pays her respects and films an inane interview, peppered with questions about his favourite food and who’s “after” him.

Assange replies with a long list, mostly comprising US government agencies, as well as Swedish authoritie­s, who will probably allow him to be extradited to America should he return to that country. “Risk” devotes a lot of time to that quandary, capturing Assange at his most misogynist­ic during a strategy session with one of his attorneys. Poitras, who presented a far more pro-Assange version of the film at Cannes last year, admits at one point that “the lines have become blurred,” adding, “I thought I could ignore the contradict­ions. ... I was so wrong. They are becoming the story.”

“Risk” is heavy on the psychodram­a between the filmmaker and her subject — Poitras regularly regales viewers with the dreams she has about Assange — reaching its dramatic climax when Assange decides to release damaging DNC emails last July. As he weighs which candidate is more deserving of being harmed, it’s as if Charlie Chaplin’s Great Dictator is dandling an inflatable globe on his knee. On the one hand, he observes, Trump might have some unsavoury business dealings in his past. On the other, Clinton clearly “has got it in for me.” And here we are.

These scenes offer chilling evidence of Poitras’ change of heart regarding Assange, who might have started out as an admirable warrior for pure transparen­cy but who evolves in the course of the film into a smug, self-righteous megalomani­ac. Even more sobering, though, is Poitras’ disclosure late in the film that she committed a serious boundary violation in the course of filming, an illadvised relationsh­ip that casts serious doubt on her judgement and credibilit­y. Her admission is too little, too late, and raises far more questions than it answers, suggesting that Poitras is either unwilling or unable to contend with the contradict­ions she so elegantly invoked moments earlier.

“Risk” raises deep misgivings about its subject and its maker. But it’s still queasily, compulsive­ly watchable — and probably necessary, if only as a cautionary example of how ethics, objectivit­y and agendas come into play in non-fiction filmmaking.

One of the chief goals of documentar­ians is to invest the audience emotionall­y with otherwise dry subject matter. There’s no denying that “Risk” achieves that aim, even if the cardinal feelings viewers walk away with are confusion, betrayal and an unshakeabl­e sense of unease. Here we are, indeed.

Two and one-half stars. Unrated. Contains some mature themes. 94 minutes. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Assange in ‘Risk’. — Courtesy of Praxis Films-Showtime Networks
Assange in ‘Risk’. — Courtesy of Praxis Films-Showtime Networks

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