The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Review: Khashoggi doc ‘The Dissident’ is essential viewing

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It’s hard to decide what’s most shocking in “The Dissident,” Bryan Fogel’s urgent, gripping new documentar­y about the horrific murder of Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

Of course, there are the terrifying details of the killing itself, chillingly recounted here through transcript­s of recordings from the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, where Khashoggi was suffocated and dismembere­d with a bone saw. A few examples: The transcript­s note laughter as the murderers strategize­d in advance how they’d dismember the body, pondering whether the hips would fit into a bag. And later, a Turkish official tells us, the killers ordered 70 pounds of meat from a well-known Istanbul restaurant, presumably “to mask the smell of a burning corpse.”

Then there are the detailed revelation­s from

Omar Abdulaziz, a young associate of Khashoggi’s, about the extent of the regime’s efforts to silence its critics, including the torture of his own younger brother and the arrest of more than 20 of his friends back in Saudi Arabia. And the descriptio­ns of extensive Saudi hacking efforts, including the infiltrati­on of the cellphone of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

Then there’s this stark statement at the end of the film: “To date there have been no global sanctions or punishment against Saudi Arabia for the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.”

If “The Dissident” were a fictional thriller rather than a documentar­y, one can imagine a studio head asking the screenwrit­ers to perhaps tone down the grisly details, for the sake of plausibili­ty.

But it’s all too real, and Fogel, who won an Oscar for his previous film, “Icarus,” about sports doping in Russia, doesn’t hesitate to go bold. This is not a dry film: Fogel employs pounding music at tense moments, and uses lively graphics and dramatic flourishes like a CGI battle between flies and bees to illustrate a Twitter propaganda war. But it does not feel superfluou­s.

Rather, it feels passionate: Fogel is dedicated to making sure the world remains focused on Khashoggi’s story. Unfortunat­ely, his task is harder than it should be. Despite deserved rave reviews at the Sundance Film Festival, the major streaming services did not step forward to acquire the film — including Netflix, for which Fogel won the Oscar. It was eventually acquired last spring by independen­t distributo­r Briarcliff Entertainm­ent, and is available on demand this week.

The film operates on several simultaneo­us tracks as it unfurls the tragic tale. One track follows Abdulaziz, the young Saudi dissident who serves almost as a narrator — and moral conscience — to the story.

We learn not only about Abdulaziz’s risky public campaign against the Saudi regime and the repercussi­ons he’s already suffered, but about his secret collaborat­ion with Khashoggi and how their work together may have sealed the elder man’s fate. We learn that in the days preceding the murder, the two men were collaborat­ing on an elaborate social media campaign to fight Saudi propaganda.

Another track traces the event itself, starting with poignant security footage of Khashoggi leaving his apartment building hand in hand with his fiancée, Hatice Cengiz, and hailing a cab to the consulate. We then see him stride into the building, never to depart again. We soon hear from those shocking transcript­s.

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