Those tense eight days form the centerpiece of "Citizenfour,"
her account of how the former National Security Agency (NSA)
contractor decided in 2013 to release to the media tens of
thousands of classified documents, and the global repercussions
of that action.
"I think he (Snowden) was certainly in danger and I certainly
had a lot of fear. I have worked in conflict zones but I felt
more fear working on this film than I did when working in
Baghdad," Poitras told Reuters.
"It was clear for me, when we started communicating over email,
that if he was legitimate we were going to anger some of the
most powerful people in the world, and people who would try to
make this stop. These are powerful institutions and they have an
enormous reach," she added.
"Citizenfour," opens in select U.S. movie theaters on Friday. It
takes its title from the moniker Snowden used when he first
approached Poitras through encrypted emails with a view to
exposing how the NSA gathers data on the Internet activities and
phone calls of millions of ordinary Americans and dozens of
world leaders.
Poitras shared a Pulitzer prize for her role in publicizing that
information, and "Citizenfour" is being tipped by awards
watchers for an Oscar nomination in January. Variety called it
"an extraordinary portrait" of Snowden, while Salon.com
described it as "an urgent, gripping real-life spy story that
should be seen by every American."
TRAITOR OR HERO?
Outwardly calm in the film, Snowden becomes jumpy at an
insistent hotel fire alarm. At one point, he dives under a red
hood to cloak his laptop and password from any overhead cameras
in the room.
When Poitras first started communicating with Snowden, now 31
and reunited in Russia with his girlfriend, she assumed he would
remain anonymous, and had no expectation of filming him.
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"But at some point he said 'I don't want to conceal my identity and
I won't be able to. They will find out.' He had made peace with
that, but he never asked to be filmed.
"He didn't want the story to be about him. He wanted the public to
understand what the government was doing. (But) I said, even if you
don't want it to be about you, the way the news works it will become
about you. And you need to be able to articulate your motivations,"
she said.
Poitras hopes the documentary will allow audiences to reach their
own conclusions about Snowden, who is wanted in the United States on
charges brought under the Espionage Act and is viewed as either a
traitor or a hero.
She said the impact of his revelations was much greater than
expected, and says there are more disclosures to come.
"Even though people claim we are being slow, these stories take a
really long time to report and to understand the documents," said
Poitras.
She relocated from New York to Berlin while working on "Citizenfour"
for fear of having her material seized.
"There is something about the way surveillance works that gets
inside your head. I can't assume my life is private any more. I go
to sleep every night and I think about the NSA, and I wake up and I
think about the NSA," she said.
(Editing by Mary Milliken and Eric Walsh)
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