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    This Does Not Compute

    The Fifth Estate bores with techno-snore story behind WikiLeaks

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 18, 2013 | 12:00 am
    The Fifth Estate bores with techno-snore story behind WikiLeaks
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    When WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange first began his assaults on governments around the world by publishing documents detailing atrocities and other secrets, only the hardiest of souls could wade through the massive amount of material he put out there. The Fifth Estate, the new movie purporting to detail Assange’s rise to prominence, is only slightly less unwieldy.

    Part of that is because, in the hands of director Bill Condon and first-time feature film writer Josh Singer, Assange (Benedict Cumberbatch) is little more than a ghost. The film is partially based on a book written by Daniel Domschelt-Berg (Daniel Bruhl) and is told mostly from his point of view.

    WikiLeaks cannot be boiled down easily, but that’s something the filmmakers should have considered when deciding whether or not to make the movie.

    Berg is portrayed as an Assange groupie of sorts, believing in Assange’s cause when few others would. Using Assange’s proprietary system that allows for anonymous submissions to WikiLeaks and Berg’s technical know-how, the two proceed to grow the site’s reputation little by little.

    Each new whistleblower seems to inspire 10 others, and it isn’t long before the site grabs the attention of the biggest governments in the world, including the United States.

    If you wanted to know exactly why Assange started the site or how he was able to start convincing people to share their secrets with him, you won’t find that information here. Precious few details are given about his background or motivations, and even when they are, they feel like they’re filtered through Berg’s viewpoint, leaving only whispers for the audience to grasp onto.

    WikiLeaks garnered the notice of major media outlets around the world, and Assange eventually decided to partner with several newspapers on the site’s biggest revelations, like logs from the Iraq War. But the dealings with those papers are so complex that Condon and Singer get bogged down in the details, taking much of the drama out of the situations.

    The film also shows U.S. government officials reacting to various leaks, but Condon stages their scenes so strangely that they feel like they’re from a completely different movie. The officials, played by Laura Linney and Stanley Tucci, have a witty repartee that’s at odds with other scenes. And in the context of the film, how the leaks affect their jobs or the government as a whole hardly seems to matter.

    To be fair, the story of WikiLeaks cannot be boiled down easily, but that’s something the filmmakers should have considered when deciding whether or not to make the movie. A film like this cannot live purely on the strength of its characters, no matter how charming or eccentric.

    That said, Cumberbatch does a fantastic job as Assange, making him impenetrable yet alluring. He floats in and out of scenes, commanding attention even when Assange isn’t the focus. He’s someone you want to know, but, frustratingly, you never get the chance.

    Bruhl makes another solid impression following his role in Rush. Berg is essentially the film’s protagonist, giving it a moral compass when Assange threatens to take his zealotry too far. Bruhl does great work in bringing out the emotions in Berg that Assange seems to lack.

    Despite the performances of Cumberbatch and Bruhl, The Fifth Estate is a slog. As a history lesson, it’s less than engaging, and when it tries to become a type of techno-thriller, it falls short. There are many lessons to be learned from WikiLeaks’ impact on how governments and media outlets are run, but don’t expect to learn them from this film.

    Daniel Bruhl in The Fifth Estate.

    Daniel Bruhl in The Fifth Estate
    The Fifth Estate Facebook
    Daniel Bruhl in The Fifth Estate.
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    Movie Review

    Iranian film It Was Just an Accident is a thriller with deep meaning

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 31, 2025 | 2:02 pm
    Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr, Majid Panahi, and Hadis Pakbaten in It Was Just an Accident
    Photo courtesy of Neon
    Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr, Majid Panahi, and Hadis Pakbaten in It Was Just an Accident.

    American filmmakers, for the most part, enjoy luxury and freedoms when making movies in the United States that filmmakers in other countries could only dream of. Not only does Iranian writer/director Jafar Panahi not have millions of dollars with which to make his films, he also has to deal with a government that has previously arrested him for being critical of their policies.

    And yet he persists, returning to the screen with the taut It Was Just An Accident. The film begins with a kind of misdirect, showing Eghbal (Ebrahim Azizi) and his family driving home at night, during which they strike and kill a dog. That accident sends Eghbal into the orbit of Vahid (Vahid Mobasseri), who works at a business that helps repair Eghbal’s car.

    Recognizing the distinctive sound of Eghbal’s prosthetic leg, Vahid believes him to be the same man who kidnapped and tortured him and others in a recent government arrest spree. Desperate to confirm his suspicions, Vahid kidnaps Eghbal and takes him to a series of people who were also imprisoned under the man they named “Peg Leg,” including Shiva (Mariam Afshari), a wedding photographer; Golrokh (Hadis Pakbaten), the bride being photographed; and more.

    Most filmmakers have the ability to use sets and take as much time as they need - within reason - to get the shot they need. Panahi employs a type of guerrilla filmmaking rarely seen these days, stealing shots in broad daylight while trying not to gain the notice of Iranian authorities. The daring nature of the making of the movie infuses the story with an extra tension that elevates what is otherwise a relatively simple story.

    The film puts the audience directly in the shoes of the various characters as each of them wrestles with the complicated feelings arising from their actions. As they were all blindfolded while imprisoned, they can’t be 100 percent sure they have the right man, and debates/arguments between the characters keep viewers guessing as to who he is and what they will do with him. Even if he is who they think he is, will enacting some kind of revenge on him soothe their consciences?

    Through it all, the idea that a former political prisoner is making a film about former political prisoners who are engaging in conduct that could get them arrested again - just as Panahi is doing with his film - makes this meta filmmaking on another level. The simplicity of the story belies the complexity underscoring the entire film, and it delivers one of the most impactful endings of any recent movie.

    While a few of the actors have acted before, including in previous Panahi films, most of them are making their first appearance in a movie. Despite this lack of experience, each of them does well, especially Mobasseri and Afshari, who share a number of heated scenes that bring out the best in both of them.

    It Was Just an Accident is the type of film that constantly keeps the audience on their collective toes, never knowing where it will head next. And that’s even if you didn’t know the details of how and why it was made; once that is discovered, it becomes something much deeper and more important than most other movies that will be released in 2025.

    ---

    It Was Just an Accident is now playing in select theaters.

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