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The Report

  • 2019
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 59 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
54.675
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
4.537
775
Annette Bening, Jon Hamm, and Adam Driver in The Report (2019)
The Report is a riveting thriller based on actual events. Idealistic staffer Daniel J. Jones (Adam Driver) is tasked by his boss Senator Dianne Feinstein (Annette Bening) to lead an investigation of the CIA’s Detention and Interrogation Program, which was created in the aftermath of 9/11.
trailer wiedergeben2:00
18 Videos
99+ Fotos
Politischer ThrillerPolitisches DramaWahres VerbrechenBiographieDramaGeschichteKriminalitätThriller

In der Folgezeit der 9/11 Angriffe beginnen CIA-Agenten, extreme Verhörtaktiken bei denen anzuwenden, von denen sie denken, dass sie dahinter stecken.In der Folgezeit der 9/11 Angriffe beginnen CIA-Agenten, extreme Verhörtaktiken bei denen anzuwenden, von denen sie denken, dass sie dahinter stecken.In der Folgezeit der 9/11 Angriffe beginnen CIA-Agenten, extreme Verhörtaktiken bei denen anzuwenden, von denen sie denken, dass sie dahinter stecken.

  • Regie
    • Scott Z. Burns
  • Drehbuch
    • Scott Z. Burns
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Adam Driver
    • Annette Bening
    • Jon Hamm
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    54.675
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    4.537
    775
    • Regie
      • Scott Z. Burns
    • Drehbuch
      • Scott Z. Burns
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Adam Driver
      • Annette Bening
      • Jon Hamm
    • 228Benutzerrezensionen
    • 170Kritische Rezensionen
    • 66Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 4 Gewinne & 13 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos18

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Teaser Trailer
    The Report
    Trailer 1:01
    The Report
    The Report
    Trailer 1:01
    The Report
    The Report
    Trailer 2:00
    The Report
    Trailer 2
    Trailer 1:01
    Trailer 2
    'The Report' Tackles Complex Subject Matter and Gets It Right
    Clip 7:08
    'The Report' Tackles Complex Subject Matter and Gets It Right
    IMDbrief: 3 Takeaways from Sundance 2019
    Clip 3:56
    IMDbrief: 3 Takeaways from Sundance 2019

    Fotos160

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    Topbesetzung65

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    Adam Driver
    Adam Driver
    • Daniel Jones
    Annette Bening
    Annette Bening
    • Senator Dianne Feinstein
    Jon Hamm
    Jon Hamm
    • Denis McDonough
    Ted Levine
    Ted Levine
    • John Brennan
    Corey Stoll
    Corey Stoll
    • Cyrus Clifford
    Evander Duck Jr.
    Evander Duck Jr.
    • Off Site Security Guard
    Linda Powell
    Linda Powell
    • Marcy Morris
    Sandra Landers
    Sandra Landers
    • Senate Intelligence Committee Clerk
    John Rothman
    John Rothman
    • Senator Sheldon Whitehouse
    Victor Slezak
    Victor Slezak
    • Senator Jay Rockefeller
    Guy Boyd
    Guy Boyd
    • Senator Saxby Chambliss
    Alexander Chaplin
    Alexander Chaplin
    • Sean Murphy
    Joanne Tucker
    Joanne Tucker
    • Gretchen
    Maura Tierney
    Maura Tierney
    • Bernadette
    Michael C. Hall
    Michael C. Hall
    • Thomas Eastman
    Ian Blackman
    Ian Blackman
    • Cofer Black
    Dominic Fumusa
    Dominic Fumusa
    • George Tenet
    Joseph Siravo
    • John Rizzo
    • Regie
      • Scott Z. Burns
    • Drehbuch
      • Scott Z. Burns
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen228

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    bob the moo

    More important than engaging, and it wears its outrage a bit too obviously

    The Report is based on a real Senate Intelligence Committee investigation into EIT, or enhanced interrogation techniques - a phrase we all know and one that is kindly considered the work of a marketing department on how best to sell torture given that people (and lawyers) generally have a problem with torture. It is unsurprisingly fairly blunt on the approach taken and how wrong it was. This approach makes it an important and worthy film, but also makes it a slightly lesser one.

    By being so obviously outraged the film plays to the choir a bit too much (a choir that contains me, if it matters). This translates into a directness and obviousness that feels a bit too simplistic and by the numbers; this is not me suggesting that it needed to make excuses for those involved, however it could have been more nuanced with the journey and had the confidence that at the end of it the viewer would still recognise how wrong this was. In not doing this, the film is still interesting, but it feels lacking in conversation and world building, instead very much making its point. Of course for me I agree with the point, so I went with the film, but it is very on-the-nose with what it does and how it structures it. In terms of delivery though, it does do well to make the writing of a report and reading of documents to be dramatic. The cuts in time work well to put meat on the bones and helps to mix the political, ethical, and real life aspects of it

    The cast is impressive in name and performance. Driver does the heavy lifting, but there is plenty of solid support from Hamm, Bening, Hall, Nelson, Levine, and others. Production values are solid throughout, and are part of it feeling like a serious, important film. It stands as such, and is a good dramatic read on a shameful period of recent history that is already mostly forgotten as it gets eclipsed by other shameful moments, and goes unmarked by the lack of consequences for those behind it. It is more important than engaging though, and could have been a stronger film for embracing the complexity more than it did.
    8Alexander_Blanchett

    Important lesson in recent history

    A very interesting and shocking lesson in history. It does not disclose anything we did not know before but it is shocking to see how much it was tried to be hidden. We got a lot of disclosure movies like this in the part and this is one of those that can be perfectly put in line with many classics off its kind. The acting was great. Adam Driver put so much energy into his role. It really shows. And even though not much back ground information or special character traits were developed for his role, he portrayed it on such a human and realistic way. Hands down one of the best best lead performances of the year so far. Annette Being was similar powerful. What made her performance was so special was the subtleness of it... not one of Bening's specialities as she is a very theatrical actress, but here she showed her calmer side and shows the same intensity as usual. I also enjoyed Jon Hamm and many of the other supporting players, there was not one weak performance. The screenplay was great, I only had some issues with the different time lines all the time, but it was effetely solved by working with colors. A really good lesson in recent history. Not dry at all, although it looks like it. Recommended.
    8phd_travel

    Concentrate it's worth the effort

    The quality of the actors should tell you this is a worthy story to be told. So concentrate it's a complicated tale that spans years and crosses party lines. Diane Feinstein puts a tenacious man in charge of looking into torture by the CIA. There is a lot to learn about torture. The movie shows both sides with this povs. The justifiers want to prevent another attack and save lives. The critics say in the majority of times it doesn't work, they only get info they already know and sometimes they get the wrong guy. Their aren't many movies telling how a government agency does bad things. This is one of the few. Adam Driver gives a convincing performance - outraged when he needs to be but not overacted. Annette Bening plays Feinstein. A host of familiar faces add credibility to supporting roles. This movie keeps a complex issue clear and highlights the opposition to the report from both political parties. A brave movie.
    8babybuletgani

    It took Senate staffer Daniel Jones seven years to compile the 6,700-page report

    It took Senate staffer Daniel Jones seven years to compile the 6,700-page report that brought this and other failings to light - a laborious process unpicked by writer/director Scott Z. Burns (whose script credits include The Bourne Ultimatum and No Time To Die) in a talky yet engrossing drama intentionally reminiscent of All The President's Men. Tasked by Senator Dianne Feinstein (a coolly commanding Annette Bening) with leaving no stone unturned, Jones - infused here with simmering indignation by a driven Adam Driver - systematically details the brutalities inflicted on all of the Agency's 119 detainees. Having assembled his torture dossier, though, Jones faces another uphill struggle to get it published. As Matthew Rhys' reporter ruefully observes, "they sent you off to build a boat they had no intention of sailing." As vessels go, The Report is one so overloaded with names, dates, flashbacks and acronyms it's a wonder it stays afloat. That it does should be attributed not just to the dogged conviction Driver exudes as its righteous hero but also to the film's unshakeable belief that the ugly truth will ultimately out. Burns' film is not an easy watch, not least when it depicts what took place in Langley's infamous "black sites". Like the harrowing data that inspired it, though, it defies redaction.
    8Bertaut

    Probably too rooted in the theatrical tradition for some, but it does an exceptional job of compacting a massive amount of info into a comprehensible form

    Anyone who has read even a little history knows that as a method of extracting useful intel, torture doesn't work. It didn't work for the Spanish Inquisition, it didn't work in Salem, it didn't work in Vietnam, it didn't work here in Ireland during the 800 years of English occupation. It has never worked and it never will, a fact known since at least the 17th century (although the Ancient Romans also had their suspicions).

    Written and directed by Scott Z. Burns, The Report tells the story of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence's $40m, five-year investigation into the CIA's illegal use of torture in the years after 9/11, and the subsequent attempts to cover it up. From 2002-2008, the Detention and Interrogation Program (to give it its official title), saw the CIA employing "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" (EIT), at a cost of $80m to the American taxpayer, with detainees held in secret locations around the world (known as "black sites"). Completed in 2012, the Committee's findings were detailed in a 6,700-page Report, which remains classified, although a redacted 525-page Executive Summary was published in 2014. What the film does exceptionally well is to condense this vast quantity of information down into a relatively easy-to-digest narrative. More of a procedural drama than a political thriller, it could do with a little emotion, and there's no denying that it's very, very talky, perhaps to the extent of being more suited to stage than screen. However, irrespective of this, it's a brilliantly acted, unflinching, and insightful look at one of the most shameful moments in US history.

    The film's plot is extremely straightforward - in light of the Agency's 2005 destruction of 92 videotapes containing interrogation material, Senator Dianne Feinstein (Annette Bening) appoints Senate investigator Daniel J. Jones (Adam Driver) as the head of a bipartisan six-person team (three Democrats, three Republicans) to investigate the Agency's general conduct when interrogating suspected terrorists. The film then takes us (often achronologically) from the commencement of the investigation in early 2009 on up to the fight to have the Report made public in 2013/2014, with both the CIA and the Obama Administration throwing up multiple obstacles. Along the way we're introduced to a plethora of characters, embodied by an exceptional cast with not a weak link amongst them - there's John Brennan (the always superb Ted Levine), Director of the CIA; Bernadette (the goddess that is Maura Tierney, playing against type) a thinly-veiled fictionalisation of Gina Haspel, Base Chief at Detention Site Green in Thailand and current CIA Director; Denis McDonough (Jon Hamm), White House Chief of Staff; Caroline D. Krauss (Jennifer Morrison), General Counsel of the CIA; Thomas Eastman (Michael C. Hall), CIA counsel; Raymond Nathan (Tim Blake Nelson), a fictional composite representing the members of the CIA's Office of Medical Services stationed at Detention Site Green, who raised early concerns about EIT; James Mitchell (Douglas Hodge) and Bruce Jessen (T. Ryder Smith), the psychologists who developed and implemented the EIT program; Ali Soufan (Fajer Al-Kaisi), an FBI agent assigned to the Bureau's Osama bin Laden unit, "I-49"; and an unnamed New York Times reporter (Matthew Rhys), to whom Jones considers leaking classified material.

    Although The Report doesn't repeat anything specifically depicted elsewhere, it does cover some of the same general narrative ground as The Looming Tower (2018) and Vice - Der zweite Mann (2018) - Soufan, for example, is in both this film and Looming Tower, and although Dick Cheney and George W. Bush (the central characters in Vice), appear don't here, they hover constantly on the margins, hidden from sight but everywhere apparent. It's also worth mentioning that, as with both The Looming Tower and Vice, The Report is a left-centric narrative, especially in terms of its depiction of EIT and how the CIA lied and falsified data.

    The depiction of Mitchell and Jessen is particularly condemning (we know from the get-go that Mitchell is an idiot because he refers to himself in the third-person). If the film has any villains, it's these two; snake-oil salesmen with psychology degrees but no experience of actual interrogations and no data to back up their claims that torture works (because no such data exists). Indeed, this element of the film was deeply personal to Burns, both of whose parents are psychologists. As he explains to PBS, he found it abhorrent that "people had figured out a way to weaponise psychology", which he believes is a tool that "exists to help people". Mitchell and Jessen are shown as enjoying the experience of hurting these people - their justification for doing so (that such interrogation will save lives) exposed as utterly fabricated. At one point, Jones reports to Feinstein that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had been waterboarded 183 times without any results, prompting her to ask, "if it works, why did they need to do it 183 times?" Why indeed.

    The film makes no bones about just how ineffective EIT actually was, and how full of garbage Mitchell and Jessen were, despite some Republicans maintaining to this day that it saved lives. In this sense, the audience is made privy to all the useful and accurate information gleaned from EIT - nothing, zero, nada, no thing, not even one thing. As per the Panetta Review (2009), the CIA's own internal inquiry, not a single piece of solid intel was ever extracted from any detainee in the program. Indeed, the contrary was true - EIT led to detainees shutting down or providing false information, or information they knew the CIA already possessed. As Jones states, "all they did was make it impossible to prosecute mass murderers."

    Also emphasised is the CIA's attempts to provide legal justification for EIT, with the so-called Torture Memos cropping up a few times. Perhaps the most significant rationale in the Memos is that the program can only be legal if it resulted in "unique, otherwise unavailable" intelligence. Or, as Bernadette says in the film, "it's only legal if it works." With this in mind, the film depicts the CIA as hedging their bets - gambling that people won't care how the information was obtained if such information leads to the capture or death of bin Laden (which it did not).

    Thematically, although the film examines multiple politically charged themes, for the most part, its thematic concerns are understated. For example, the Republicans who oppose the Report adopt a stance of "admit nothing, deny everything, make counter accusations". The filmmakers, of course, had no idea that their movie would be in cinemas concurrently with a House Intelligence Committee impeachment inquiry into the actions of the current president, Donald Trump, who has adopted an identical position from his first day in office. This parallel is never explicitly addressed, but it's right there for those willing to see it. It's also important insofar as one of the film's most salient themes is that the CIA's flagrant disregard for the rule of law, the Constitution, and basic human rights must never again be allowed to happen. This is not to suggest that Trump has sanctioned torture (although at this point, would it surprise anyone), rather to illustrate how quickly we forget the lessons of yesterday.

    Although it's mentioned on several occasions that Jones's team and the Report itself must avoid partisan politics, like so many aspects of life in the US, the investigation and debate regarding publication split along broadly partisan lines - the Intelligence Committee voted to publish the Executive Summary by a vote of 9-6; the eight Democrats and Olympia Snowe against six Republicans. John McCain was a member of the Committee ex officio, and so didn't have a vote, but made it known he agreed with the Democrats and Snowe. On the other hand, neither Obama nor John Kerry were overjoyed about releasing even a redacted version, and McDonagh wanted more redactions than were ultimately used. Also in service of a balanced depiction, the film references Feinstein's disdain for Edward Snowden and whistle-blowers in general. It's to the film's credit that it doesn't shy away from such opinions, thus avoiding an overly neat dichotomy of Democrat=good/Republican=bad.

    Despite its importance, however, I can't see The Report packing them in at the multiplex. For one, it's exceptionally talky. I would argue that this simply positions the film in the theatrical tradition, but I can certainly understand people regarding it as one step removed from an audio recording of the actual Report. There's also a distinct lack of emotion - every time Jones begins to emote, somebody shuts him down. Along the same lines, there's no character development - we learn nothing about anyone beyond their involvement or connection with EIT and the Report; we never see where they live, we never see family members, we're not made privy to who they are as people. This is by design of course, with Burns wanting to focus on the facts, but again, I can understand people finding it unsatisfactory. All of this results in a dry and sterile film that leans entirely on its procedural elements, which certainly won't be to everyone's taste.

    The Report is a straightforward and restrained film, in which Burns's focus is razor-sharp and unwavering. Depicting how EIT shamed the nation, betraying the very values that were supposedly being fought for in the first place, the film excoriates both the Bush administration for letting it happen and the Obama administration for its reluctance to make it public. It's not exactly exciting in a traditional sense, but it sure is compelling; a story that's infuriating insofar as it actually happened, horrifying insofar as, given the clown currently in the Oval Office, it could easily happen again.

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    • Wissenswertes
      The film premiered at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and received a standing ovation for the real Daniel J. Jones, who was present at the showing.
    • Zitate

      Gretchen: You may not realize, but we were trying to protect this country from people who wanna destroy everything we believe in.

      Daniel Jones: You may not realize it, but we are trying to do the exact same thing.

    • Crazy Credits
      When the title is first shown, it reads, "The Torture Report." Then the second word is "redacted" to reveal the new title: "The Report."
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in CTV News at 11:30 Toronto: Folge vom 8. September 2019 (2019)
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      Written by Jeff Hanneman (as Jeffrey John Hanneman)

      Courtesy of American Recordings, LLC

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      • 7. November 2019 (Deutschland)
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      • 1 Std. 59 Min.(119 min)
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