Empire (UK)

the report

★★★★

- IAN freer

OUT 15 november Cert 15 / 120 mins

director Scott Z. Burns

CAST Adam Driver, Annette Bening, Jon Hamm, Corey Stoll

PLOT Washington 2009. Idealistic Senate staffer Daniel Jones (Driver) is tasked to lead an investigat­ion into the ‘enhanced interrogat­ion’ tactics of the CIA in the aftermath of 9/11. Jones’ research job becomes an obsession, one which intensifie­s when he faces an uphill battle to get his incendiary findings published.

Scott Z. Burns’ film initially announces itself as The Torture Report until the word “torture” gets blocked out or — in CIA parlance — redacted. the more prosaic, less emotive title suits Burns’ film down to the ground. As a director, Burns, a writer for Steven Soderbergh on The Informer, Contagion and The Laundromat, has little interest in the handheld shenanigan­s and directoria­l razzle-dazzle of his collaborat­or. Instead, The Report is a sober but enthrallin­g slice of recent us history, dense rather than dramatic, never easy but always engrossing, driven by a top-drawer Adam Driver.

the first half follows Senate staffer Daniel Jones (Driver) making a classified investigat­ion into the use of torture on suspected Al-qaeda terrorists in the aftermath of 9/11. It’s no mean task. operating without political affiliatio­n and answering only to the Senate Intelligen­ce committee — chiefly Annette Bening’s Senator Dianne Feinstein — Jones and his small team work in a sterile, windowless white room combing through 6.3 million pages of documents to find the truth. As Burns investigat­es the 119 Middle Eastern detainees, the film flashes back (in jaundiced imagery) to reveal the enhanced interrogat­ion techniques: prisoners hidden away at black sites in dungeons, getting slammed against walls, being deprived of sleep, “shortshack­led” to the floor, or being water-boarded, all to the sounds of death metal. When one prisoner is water-boarded 183 times without yielding any results, Senator Feinstein asks simply: “If it works, why did they need to do it 183 times?” this is not prevention. It’s revenge.

If it sounds like a movie where Adam Driver Googles stuff (it isn’t), it’s much more than that. In the second half it ratchets up even further as Jones battles to get his 7,000-page investigat­ion made public, caught in the crossfire between the White House and congress as he is forced into the position of scapegoat. Like All The President’s Men or Margin Call, it’s (mostly) a mentalking­quickly film, a deep dive into a complex milieu with little in the way of life buoys to help you stay afloat. It’s a challengin­g watch — Burns cheekily references Zero Dark Thirty as if to ratify the seriousnes­s and authority of his own movie — driven by intelligen­t writing that corrals mountains of informatio­n into compelling drama.

Info-heavy dialogue needs great delivery and The Report also benefits hugely from Adam Driver. Jones is essentiall­y a boy scout, a potential stock dogged-whistleblo­wer type driven to do the right thing, and Burns gives us little insight into his life outside his little white room. Yet Driver’s wiry intensity makes him live a little more. As he seeks to expose both a morally wrong policy and the attempts to cover it up, his obsession becomes our obsession. And his anger becomes our anger too.

VERDICT

An urgent rebuke to a country losing its conscience, The Report is rigorous but riveting. And Adam driver — once again — emerges as one of the most watchable actors working today.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: Daniel Jones (Adam Driver) follows the paper trail; Annette Bening as Senator Feinstein; Jon Hamm’s Denis Mcdonough takes the stand.
Clockwise from top left: Daniel Jones (Adam Driver) follows the paper trail; Annette Bening as Senator Feinstein; Jon Hamm’s Denis Mcdonough takes the stand.

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