In The Run-Up To War, A British Whistleblower Exposes 'Official Secrets'
Director Gavin Hood's film about a leaked NSA memo becomes an ambitious indictment of the invasion of Iraq itself, though it's saddled with drab visuals of characters frowning at computer screens.
by Andrew Lapin
Aug 29, 2019
3 minutes
We are still figuring out how to make compelling films about 21st-century geopolitics. The stakes in this arena have never been higher, but they've also never been less visually exciting. Most unscrupulous maneuvers these days occur not in secret parking-structure meetings or hotel rooms, but behind computer screens, where the good people can frown while squinting at emails and .wav files.
The latest attempt to make such screens come alive is , a new biopic of Iraq War whistleblower Katharine Gun. In 2003,
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