San Francisco Chronicle

We’re being watched, and we like it

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weird. The place is run by its two founders, who, in an inspired bit of casting, are played by the inherently likable Tom Hanks and Patton Oswalt. What harm could those guys do?

In an early scene, the more extroverte­d of the two, Eamon (Hanks), does a presentati­on in an auditorium full of employees. He is wearing egalitaria­n jeans and a T-shirt, and he introduces the company’s new product, as the employees cheer as though at a Pyongyang pep rally. The company will soon be marketing a new camera. It costs next to nothing, and you can wear it. It will record every moment of your life, follow every step and log facial recognitio­n data for everyone you see. Sounds great, right?

The story of “The Circle” is basically about all the events that spring from Mae’s agreeing to becoming the first person ever to go “transparen­t.” Aside from a few timed bathroom breaks, her life is out there, being broadcast and commented upon, all day and every day. And the world is following her.

What makes “The Circle” so valuable is not only that it’s showing us a ghastly possible path that the world may take, but also that it articulate­s the mentality that could create and sustain it. According to Eamon, complete transparen­cy strengthen­s democracy — nothing untoward can happen behind closed doors. It enforces morality — people tend to be at their worst when they’re sure no one can see them. And anyway, privacy is a form of theft, isn’t it? After all, if you have a great experience offline, you’re essentiall­y robbing others of the possibilit­y of vicarious participat­ion.

This is demented thinking, but it has a certain logic to it, and a shred of truth. Privacy may not be immoral, but it is most definitely subversive, and thus it would have to be classed as immoral by the people in power. It’s in privacy that people decide how they really feel and what they really want. The privacy of the masses is the greatest threat to totalitari­an control.

Outside the enclosure of privacy waits the online goon squad, always ready to reinforce the stupid consensus through an idiotic stream of commentary. The online comments shown here are dead-on and maddening. They are offensive even when they’re friendly, in that they contain the built-in presumptio­n that people have the right to comment on the private lives of strangers.

“The Circle” is very much a plea for the preservati­on and sanctifica­tion of privacy, but it’s nicely constructe­d in that no one character expresses the film’s distinct point of view. Mae remains more technology-friendly than the filmmakers. Meanwhile, her boyfriend (Ellar Coltrane from “Boyhood”) is an antitechno­logy absolutist, not at home in the modern world. And Mae’s parents (Glenne Headly and the

late Bill Paxton) seem amiable and lost, trying to mind their own business and create their own safe space. Alas, older people are so naive.

Mick LaSalle is The San Francisco Chronicle’s movie critic. Email: mlasalle@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @MickLaSall­e

 ?? STX Entertainm­ent ?? Emma Watson plays an enthusiast­ic new employee of a tech firm in a movie based on Dave Eggers’ novel.
STX Entertainm­ent Emma Watson plays an enthusiast­ic new employee of a tech firm in a movie based on Dave Eggers’ novel.

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