9 / 10
Citizenfour is Laura Poitras’s 2014 American documentary depicting Edward Snowden’s June 2013 meetings with Poitras and journalist Glenn Greenwald in Hong Kong, when Snowden disclosed classified National Security Agency documents revealing extensive surveillance programs. The production combines real-time footage of these meetings with subsequent material covering the disclosure’s consequences. The film was produced by HBO Documentary Films and Praxis Films. The production won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
Citizenfour proves how documentary could operate as journalism in real time, capturing actual events of historical consequence as they unfolded. The film rests on the idea that documentary narrative can rely on direct access to its subject during the actual disclosure events. Snowden works as a figure whose decision-making and personality emerge across the film’s primary sequence. Laura Poitras’s direction keeps observational presence that converts the Hong Kong meetings into documentary record. The production became the model that subsequent journalism-documentary productions extended.
The Real-Time Approach
Citizenfour builds on real-time footage of Snowden’s Hong Kong meetings with Poitras and Greenwald as the film’s primary content. This technique relies on direct access that conventional documentary after-the-fact reconstruction could not provide. This generates documentary record of historical events as they actually occurred.
The footage captures Snowden’s preparation, the initial document review, and the journalists’ processing of the material’s implications. This approach allows the film to register the actual texture of investigative journalism at major scale. This left a template that other filmmakers extended this.
For Writers
Real-time documentary requires access during events of consequence rather than reconstruction afterward. Watch how Poitras’s presence in Hong Kong enabled the film’s substantive content.
Snowden Portrait
Citizenfour develops Snowden’s portrait through the Hong Kong footage that registers his deliberation and personality across the disclosure period. This approach uses extended observation that conventional interview-based documentary could not match. the director generates compounding character that the production’s primary access enables.
The footage shows Snowden’s preparation for public disclosure, including his concern about distinguishing the substantive content from his own person. The approach reveals how the subject understood the journalistic process he was initiating. It set the template for the films that came after about whistleblowing.
For Writers
Subject portrait in real-time documentary registers personality through actual decision-making rather than reflective interview. Track how Poitras captures Snowden’s deliberation across the Hong Kong sequence.
The Surveillance Subject
Citizenfour works through handling of surveillance as production’s substantive content through the disclosed documents and the journalists’ analysis. This approach develops through specific material that converts policy debate into building detail. This generates documentary substance that conventional policy productions handle differently.
The production’s own awareness of being a surveillance target serves as recurring element that shapes this film’s approach. The approach illustrates how documentary can register the conditions of its own creation. The film became the model for the films that came after navigating surveillance subjects.
For Writers
Documentary on surveillance can register the conditions of its own creation. See how Poitras incorporates her own surveillance status into the picture’s substantive content.
Craft Note
Citizenfour shows how documentary acts as journalism in real time with access to events of historical consequence. The production’s Academy Award and compounding reputation confirmed its status. The technical subject matter and political content required commitment from audiences, though this picture rewards engaged viewing through its gathered impact.
Verdict
Citizenfour is mandatory viewing for understanding the real-time journalism documentary, the Laura Poitras tradition, and the engagement of documentary with surveillance through direct access to disclosure events.
FAQ
Who directed Citizenfour?
Laura Poitras directed Citizenfour. Poitras worked with journalists Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill on the original disclosure.
When were the Snowden meetings?
The Hong Kong meetings between Snowden, Poitras, and Greenwald occurred in early June 2013 over approximately one week.
Did Citizenfour win Academy Award?
Citizenfour won Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2015.
Where is Snowden now?
Snowden has lived in Russia since 2013 after his United States passport was cancelled while he was in transit through Moscow. He has received Russian citizenship.
What did the documents reveal?
The disclosed documents revealed extensive NSA surveillance programs including bulk collection of telephone records and internet communications. The disclosure generated substantial policy debate.
Who was ‘Citizenfour’?
Citizenfour was Snowden’s pseudonym in his initial encrypted communications with Poitras before he revealed his identity in Hong Kong.
What is the film’s rating?
Citizenfour is rated R for language.