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‘Words of War' profiles a journalist killed for speaking truth to power

‘Words of War' profiles a journalist killed for speaking truth to power

CNN30-04-2025

Maxine Peake stars as the late journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who was an independent voice for the victims of Putin's Russia. David Daniel looks at the film, which opens May 2, one day before UN World Press Freedom Day on May 3.

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‘Words of War' Review: Portrait of a Fearless Reporter
‘Words of War' Review: Portrait of a Fearless Reporter

New York Times

time01-05-2025

  • New York Times

‘Words of War' Review: Portrait of a Fearless Reporter

The sort of movie in which a story's inherent power is enough to oil otherwise creaky biopic machinery, 'Words of War' dramatizes the life of Anna Politkovskaya, the Russian journalist who became known for her tenacious reporting on the second Chechen war and for her undaunted criticism of Vladimir V. Putin. The movie opens with an apparent attempt on her life — a poisoning on an airplane — and ends with her death in 2006, when she was murdered in her Moscow apartment building. In between, it recounts the tremendous risks that Politkovskaya (played by Maxine Peake) faced in finding and persuading people to talk. When she travels to Grozny, she has difficulty earning the confidence of Chechens, who believe that no Russian reporter can be trusted. One says that she is trying to illuminate 'the black hole of the world.' The Russian military eyes her warily, too (a major threatens to slit her throat), and soon an agent (Ian Hart) visits her while she is getting coffee and a croissant in Moscow — to make it clear he's keeping watch. The closing credits acknowledge that the filmmakers (James Strong directed a screenplay by Eric Poppen) have taken some dramaturgical liberties, including inventing the Hart character. Politkovskaya's own description of serving as a hostage negotiator at a Moscow theater in 2002 differs in tenor from the portrayal of events onscreen. Some deviations are inevitable, but the expository dialogue — and the convention of having Russian characters speak English, with British accents — are distractions. Even so, Politkovskaya's bravery, and Peake's commitment to honoring it, is enough.

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