Emma
Watson says 'The Circle' brought home pitfalls of social
media
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[April 28, 2017]
By Jill Serjeant
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Emma
Watson says making her new movie "The Circle," about a
fictitious social media giant, had been a tough and
vulnerable experience that brought home issues of ethics
and the boundaries of privacy in an increasingly public
age.
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Watson, 27, grew up in the public eye as a child actress in
the "Harry Potter" movies, but the British star said she had not
fully considered the implications of mass data collection,
online activities, and personal freedom before making "The
Circle."
"It was a very vulnerable experience for me making this movie...
(It) was very hard for me and very meaningful," Watson told the
audience after the premiere of the movie on Wednesday at the
Tribeca film festival.
Based on the book of the same name by Dave Eggers, "The Circle,"
opening in U.S. movie theaters on Friday, is a chilling vision
of how social media giants control and monitor personal
information - not always for the good. The Circle is a
fictitious company that has been likened to Google, Facebook and
Twitter.
In a culture of "Dream Fridays" and slogans like "Sharing is
Caring," Watson's character Mae volunteers to become "fully
transparent" wearing a marble-sized camera, 24/7 that streams
all her activities online. The experiment leads to the
terrifying online hounding, tracking and death of a close friend
who had tried to shun social media.
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"I didn't think about most of this stuff before," said
Watson, who noted that the U.S. Congress in March reversed Obama
administration era internet privacy rules on the selling of
individual browsing information
"Trust me, I have grilled Dave Eggers. Really, I have taken him
to a room and said 'What do we do? What do we do?'!," she said.
"A lot of friendships have a hard time surviving in the pressure
cooker of the world that we live in and how public everything
is. It's really tough."
Director James Ponsoldt said he was inspired to make the film
after reading what he called Eggers' "darkly hilarious" 2013
book, and by the birth of his first child in an age where
everything can be documented.
"It terrified me," said Ponsoldt. "It was that sort of psychic
terror that was the catalyst for the whole thing."
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by David Gregorio)
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