Film Review: Official Secrets (2019)

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The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

The Daily Orca-3.5 of 5 stars


The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

Official Secrets has the story and the talent but gets bogged down in the melodrama. Itโ€™s not a bad movie, but where it could have been a riveting procedural, it is instead a watered-down look at events that should have caused international outrage. Itโ€™s scattered narrative and lack of clear character motivation early on had me on alert, but the film manages enough bite and relevance to keep interests piqued.

The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

For some, the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 may seem like ancient history, but it isnโ€™t and it shouldnโ€™t be. Just prior to the invasion, British government communications expert Katharine Gun leaked a document outlining illegal U.S. government strong-arm tactics and blackmail measures meant to secure U.N. votes in favor of war with Iraq. Not protected under whistleblower laws, Gun was charged with a violation of Englandโ€™s Official Secrets Act of 1989.

The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

As I said,ย plenty of story. The film first goes wrong, however, by not explaining Gunโ€™s motivation upfront. I find it hard to believe that one day, out of the blue, she decides to steal classified documents, thus committing treason. Later, once sheโ€™s in custody, she expresses her motives in clear, Oscar-bait fashion, but by now itโ€™s too late. Her reasons are just and make sense, but the first we hear of them is an hour after the fact. This choice doesnโ€™t make narrative sense, and worse, it paints Gun (Keira Knightley) as flighty and unintelligent.

The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

Official Secrets works best when itโ€™s embracing its investigative procedural angles such as the London Observer reporters tracking down corroboration of her story. These moments successfully call up great newspaper films like All the Presidentโ€™s Men (1976) and the work of David Simon, but itโ€™s never maintained for long. Gunโ€™s personal experiences certainlyย deserve to be told, but the film loses sight by jumping back and forth between the micro and macro of the whole story. Add to that the ham-fisted attempts at creating tension (such as the near-deportation of Gunโ€™s husband, played by Adam Bakri) and even more is lost in the shuffle.

The Daily Orca-Film Review-Official Secrets (2019)

Fortunately, what works outweighs what doesnโ€™t. The inquiring newspaper elements are entertaining, and the Observer staff (including Matt Smith, Matthew Goode, and Rhys Ifans) hold up their end of things nicely enough. Knightley is fineย as well, if a bitย overdramatic at times,ย but the biggest surprise is the addition of Ralph Fiennes near the end of the film. He classes the place up a bit and offers some unexpected buoyancy to an otherwise grim picture.

Official Secrets is not a must-see film,ย  but it does offer an interesting tidbit of history that none of us would be wise to forget about.