New Julian Assange Documentary Explores The Complicated World Of WikiLeaks

In a scene from Laura Poitras’ documentary “Risk,” Julian Assange ― already bereft of his signature white hairdo ― is attempting a disguise.

The camera follows the WikiLeaks founder as he inserts colored contact lenses, fits a hat over his newly dyed mane, and inspects an awkward pair of gauge earrings that somehow manage to distract from his otherwise distinguishable features. In that moment, Assange has recently learned that the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court ruled that he should be extradited to Sweden to face sexual assault allegations. As he wordlessly bids farewell to his mother, it’s clear that the paranoid Australian expat has no plans of acquiescing.

Instead, he’s minutes away from hopping on a bike that will eventually lead him to the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he’s lived from 2012 on, in a prison of his own making. Swedish and U.S. authorities have reportedly been after him since 2010 ― the year WikiLeaks rose to prominence atop a wave of disclosures provided by military intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. Despite a UN panel’s decision to characterize Assange’s circumstances as “arbitrary detainment,” he’s continued to seek refuge (or obstruct justice, depending on how you view the situation) there to this day.

Poitras’ thrilling film, released two and a half years after her 2014 doc “CitizenFour” centered on Edward Snowden, spans the bulk of these years. It begins in a notably more idealistic time period, when outlets like Amnesty International were praising WikiLeaks as a catalyst for the Arab Spring’s string of protests against authoritarian regimes. It opens with Assange and his colleague Sarah Harrison kindly attempting to contact then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton by phone in order to warn her of an unforeseen breach of WikiLeaks and, subsequently, State Department cables. It swings through the golden days of their push for radical transparency, brushing over the “Iraq War Logs” leaked by Manning, which included footage of an American airstrike that killed two Reuters journalists.

And then, the film takes a turn. “This is not the film I thought I was making,” Poitras declares in a voice-over from her production diary. “I thought I could ignore the contradictions,” but the contradictions “are becoming the story.”

”Risk” has undergone a series of last-minute edits that prolonged the film’s release. The doc originally screened at Cannes Film Festival in May of 2016, but substantial events in Assange’s timeline thereafter ― former WikiLeaks representative Jacob Appelbaum was accused of sexual assault, while Assange was accused of abetting Trump’s election victory by way of Russian-sponsored hackers who leaked emails from the Democratic National Committee ― prompted the filmmaker to shift gears.

The first iteration of the film already addressed the nuances of Assange’s own sexual assault allegations, showing a scene in which he wryly suggests to a female legal advisor that the women accusing him of misconduct could be part of a radical feminist conspiracy group attempting to upend WikiLeaks. (The advisor, Helena Kennedy, painstakingly points out the flaws in this logic. Assange dismisses her with a troubling smile.) But upon learning of the case against hacker and free speech advocate Appelbaum, with whom Poitras was briefly involved in a relationship, she realized she needed to go back to her footage to look deeper into what these allegations ― and the attitudes and behaviors behind them ― meant.

“The reason I felt like I needed to address [the allegations] in the film,” Poitras explained to HuffPost in an interview that took place at her Praxis office in New York City, “is because obviously it was relevant to the work that I was doing and filming. But I also think it’s relevant broadly ― that we need to understand it’s not just in the hacker scene, but in newsrooms, in political movements. That excusing behavior just because there’s a larger ideological mission or because there’s an external threat or because someone has power over you ― all of those things, we should push back [on].”

Poitras is rarely explicit about how exactly viewers should assess the contradictions she lays bare in her documentary, whether they have to do with the deeply engrained misogyny that exists in the same space as an obsession with free expression, or the many other inconsistencies she films. In one scene that Poitras describes as “revealing” and humorous, Assange sits down with Lady Gaga in the Ecuadorian embassy to discuss the many, many entities currently investigating him. He seems enthralled with the celebrity before him, and the opportunity to have Gaga propel his story on her specific platform. Unlike the Snowden of “CitizenFour,” he seems unafraid of becoming Poitras’ or anyone else’s story.

Of course, the film has also shifted to include information about the 2016 presidential election. WikiLeaks, once hailed as capable of holding state power accountable, has been accused of becoming a tool for that same state power after it accepted hacked DNC information from a third party purportedly directed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“It seems so many things came full circle in this story,” Poitras explained. “At the beginning, it’s this whistleblower has released information. And now, a state actor has released the massive data sets. Julian has denied that his source is a state actor, but it seems like if an intermediary is used, what does that mean?”

Poitras’ film poses a lot of questions about the future of WikiLeaks, what it means to advocate for radical transparency, and how journalism at large will be affected by the persecution of Assange. If the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks can’t accept leaked information about the U.S. government without facing repercussions, what happens to members of the press and their sources?

While her documentary leaves the conclusions up to the viewers, the U.S. government has come down clear with its stance. The Justice Department is preparing charges against Assange, while CIA Director Mike Pompeo has characterized WikiLeaks as a “hostile intelligence service.”

“It’s completely chilling,” Poitras said of Pompeo’s declaration. “I think [Attorney General Jeff] Sessions was asked about WikiLeaks, but his response was about leakers more broadly, which is declaring war against journalism and leakers. And I think we’d be really foolish to think that includes just Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, but it’s targeting the press more broadly. And I say that within the context. I don’t want to let anyone forget how horrible the Obama administration was on the press. The Obama administration had more espionage investigations that were targeting leakers and journalists than any president before him, so it’s a continuation of that. Trump certainly campaigned on an attack-the-press platform, and he’s continued on his promised. I think it’s very chilling.”

“Risk” opened on Friday in a limited number of theaters. It will air on Showtime later this year.

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The Amazon Reviews Of Ivanka’s New Book Act Pretty Adequately Sum Up America

If you haven’t heard, Ivanka Trump, an assistant to President Donald Trump who just randomly doubles as his daughter, has a new book out. It’s titled Women Who Work: Rewriting the Rules for Success.

Say what you will about the book itself, and people have said a lot of very bad things, but it’s created quite the schism on Amazon ― one that works rather well as a metaphor for an incredibly polarized and hostile U.S. political climate.

As of this writing, almost literally everyone who has reviewed the book on Jeff Bezos’ money machine has has either trashed it or loved it. Seriously, 44 percent have given it five stars (the highest rating), and 53 percent have given it one star (the lowest rating). Only 3 percent of all reviews fell somewhere in the middle. 

The love-it-or-hate-it views of the book ― pointed out by economist David Rothschild on Twitter ― obviously fall along partisan lines, but they also say something larger about how we consume almost everything today. 

For many people, politics has become some akin to sport. A past study, published just a bit before Trump’s political rise, actually found that people care more about their political party winning than they do about what effect that victory might have on their country. 

This us-versus-them mentality has led to a growing inability to engage with people who don’t hold the exact same opinions. It feels as if there are very few conversations these days that end up somewhere in the middle ― in a four-star, three-star or two-star area.

We’re a nation that sees things in terms of black or white, love or hate, good or evil, five stars or one star. 

But c’mon, at least a few more people should have felt like Ivanka’s book was just “whatever,” right? 


Every Friday, HuffPost’s Culture Shift newsletter helps you figure out which books you should read, art you should check out, movies you should watch and music should listen to. Sign up here.

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Claire Danes And Hugh Dancy Summed Up Parenting In Two Sentences

On Monday, celebrities descended on the the Upper East Side for the annual Met Gala.

Humans of New York photographer Brandon Stanton was on hand to talk to famous attendees and shared notable snapshots and soundbites from the likes of Ryan Reynolds, Serena Williams, and Matt Damon.

But perhaps the most spot-one quote came from none other than Claire Danes and Hugh Dancy.

Speaking about their 4-year-old son Cyrus, they told Stanton, “Having a child was the best thing that ever happened to us. But it is constant company with terrible conversation.”

Too real.

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The 20 Funniest Tweets From Women This Week

The ladies of Twitter never fail to brighten our days with their brilliant ― but succinct ― wisdom. Each week, HuffPost Women rounds up hilarious 140-character musings. For this week’s great tweets from women, scroll through the list below. Then visit our Funniest Tweets From Women page for our past collections.

Sign up for our Funniest Tweets Of The Week newsletter here

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Illustrator Holds Nothing Back Depicting The Horror Of Trumpcare

House Republicans passed legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on Thursday and replace it with the American Health Care Act (AHCA). If passed in the Senate, the proposed bill, described as a “moral travesty,” would gut health care coverage for millions, ax Medicaid expansions, and allow for discrimination against individuals with a lengthy list of pre-existing conditions that disproportionately affect women.

“I was surprised,” artist Edel Rodriguez told HuffPost, upon hearing the bill was voted through the House. “Because of what happened a month ago, I figured it wouldn’t pass. But these guys seem to be really intent on ruining lives. They kept at it.”

Rodgriguez is a Cuban-born, New York-based artist whose illustrations collapse the details of Trump’s alarming rise to power into stark, urgent graphics that are as easily digestible as they are scathing. The day after AHCA was announced, Rodriguez uploaded two new images to his Facebook, again translating the nation’s angst and horror into imagery that pops and burns.

“It makes it easier,” he explained, “if you have something you want to say right away. And you have an audience right away, too. People are angry, they are looking for something to hold on to, share and talk about. I want to help people realize they are not alone.” 

One of Rodriguez’ drawings features an orange, faceless man in white scrubs and a red tie, holding a bloody chainsaw in his hand. The second reduces the same Dr. Trump to the size of a middle finger, which flies in the face of the viewer. Like Rodriguez’ previous work ― which famously includes an image of Trump decapitating the Statue of Liberty ― the images are not subtle. 

“I really do feel this president is an abuser,” Rodriguez said. “He abuses people. And when someone is getting abused, I want someone to come in and say, ‘You’re not alone in this, I feel it to.’ There is no reason to go after people with medical issues, people who are poor and need help.”

In an earlier interview with HuffPost, Rodriguez explained how artwork has the rare capability to communicate instantly and intensely, regardless of who the viewer may be. “I want to make images that can reach someone with a Ph.D. and someone who is an immigrant laborer who doesn’t speak English,” he said. 

He also expressed hope that the blunt indignation in his imagery would inspire others to shed their hesitation and get angry. “My work encourages people that are a little afraid,” he said. “When they see what I do, and all the stuff that comes at me, they might say, ‘Wow, that guy has some guts. Maybe I should get some, too.’”

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Welcome to Battleground, where art and activism meet.

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Photographer Does Typical Newborn Photoshoot … But With A Kitten

Kitty Schaub, a 30-year-old photographer from Benton Habor, Michigan, recently had a paw-some idea.

Three weeks ago, she and her 5-year-old daughter, Amelie, adopted a kitten they named Luna.

Naturally, Amelie is obsessed with her new furry friend.

“When Amelie plays in her doll house, the kitten is in there too,” Schaub told HuffPost. “She even asked if they could take a bath together last night!”

On April 24, Schaub took out a bunch of props she uses for newborn baby photoshoots in preparation for a client. She was about to wash them, when she noticed Luna snoozing away on the couch and was suddenly struck with a fun idea.

“I picked her up, loosely wrapped her in a blanket, and set her down,” Schaub said.

The photographer began to snap away, treating little Luna just like she would an infant subject.

And the results are pretty cute and funny:

“The bowl I posed her in is literally a salad bowl from my kitchen,” said Schaub.

“She didn’t even wake up,” she said. “We had to try to wake her up to get her to open her eyes, but she was very comfortable in there.”

After Schaub’s five-minute photo session shooting Luna was over, she found the photos so hilarious she decided to post them to her professional Facebook page. The pictures quickly went viral, receiving over 64,000 likes and 66,000 shares.

Fans of the photos even requested more photos of Luna, and Schaub happily obliged.

And when Schaub’s sister-in-law, Danielle, mentioned that the kitten looked like Dinah from “Alice in Wonderland,” the photographer got a great idea for a cute “Mommy & Me” photo series with Amelie:

“Since Ami already had an Alice dress, it was the perfect idea!” she told HuffPost.

And because so many people think Luna’s pictures are the cat’s meow, Schaub has decided to compile them in a June to December 2017 calendar, which is on sale for $20 a pop on her site.

All the proceeds will go to Save a Stray, an animal rescue in St. Joseph, Michigan.

Now isn’t that purr-ecious?

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See Richard Gere And Laura Linney As Sparring Parents In ‘Virginia Woolf’-Type Thriller

Couples spending a night arguing and/or bonding under one roof is an under-appreciated movie genre, partly because it provides an excuse to put a slew of interesting actors on the same screen. This at least dates back to “Who’s Afraid of Virgnia Woolf?,” with recent examples featuring disparate pairs coming together in the name of their children. In 2011, “Carnage” did it with Kate Winslet, Christoph Waltz, Jodie Foster and John C. Reilly. In 2015, “The Overnight” gave the concept a comedic bent via Adam Scott, Taylor Schilling, Jason Schwartzman and Judith Godrèche. 

The Dinner,” which opens in limited release this weekend, revisits that plotline. This time, Richard Gere, Rebecca Hall, Steve Coogan and Laura Linney star as the central quartet, who meet to discuss a crime their respective sons have committed.  

HuffPost has an exclusive clip from the thriller, written and directed by Oren Moverman. Tensions are running high among these anxious parents, and this scene alone offers a showcase for four of our finest actors. 

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Remember That NSFW Queer Coloring Book? The Artist Is Back With Stunning New Work

In January 2016, HuffPost Queer Voices brought you one of our favorite pieces of art from the past year: a very NSFW queer coloring book called LAST NIGHT I DREAMT THAT SOMEBODY LOVED ME by artist Nathan Rapport.

The coloring book depicted beautifully graphic sex scenes between men contrasted with lyrics from classic heartbreak songs, inviting the viewer to examine their own relationship with atrophying of intimacy and casual sex.

Now Rapport is set to showcase new work ― a series of paintings that highlight moments of connection in a show called “In the Springtime of His Voodoo.”

“I took this show as an opportunity to look at intimacy in a different way than I did with the coloring book,” Rapport told HuffPost. “Rather than focusing on the loss of intimacy, and subsequent search for it, with these new paintings I have decided to take moments of intimate connection, and hover on them and observe them in a grateful manner. Choosing to move back into painting has allowed me to flesh out these moments in a way line illustration never would.  By utilizing a hypercolor palette, elements of fantasy, nature imagery, and nostalgia by way of musical reference, I hope to create visual experiences of heightened gay romance.”

Rapport also told HuffPost that after publishing LAST NIGHT I DREAMT THAT SOMEBODY LOVED ME, he has expanded his work into a variety of different creative mediums, including wearable art forms.

“Since the book I have pretty much dedicated all my energy to creating new work and taking it on the road,” Rapport continued. “The almost year-long book tour grew many sets of legs and has allowed me to create a whole line of queer wearables, resulting in collaborations with Mr. S Leather and Folsom Street Fair. The push from the book also led to several gallery opportunities, and I’m very grateful and excited that fine art, specifically painting, is my crystal clear focus again. Preparing for this show has forced me to flex muscles I haven’t worked out in too long, and simply taking more time with each piece on a technical level has created a greater level of intimacy between myself and the paintings. I feel like this show is the start of a new, more focused and patient phase of my work, and it excites me a lot.”

When asked what he wanted viewers to take away from his latest work, Rapport told HuffPost, “I hope viewers look at this work and are able to lose themselves in the connection occurring on the page or canvas.” He added, “It’s one thing to recognize an embrace or a kiss as tender or connected, but another to physically feel the electricity between a pair of almost touching lips. To have an image make you weak in the knees or tingly in the toes. I want people to feel the breath in these moments.”

In the Springtime of His Voodoo” is on display from Friday, May 2 – 27, 2017 at Strut in San Francisco.

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See 5 Beautiful Weddings Across The Globe In 90 Seconds

To survey spirituality’s role in everyday lives, Oscar-winning documentarian Thomas Lennon commissioned more than 40 filmmakers across the globe to capture ceremonial expressions of faith. The end result is “Sacred,” a travelogue that celebrates humans’ search for meaning. 

The Huffington Post has an exclusive clip from the documentary, which opens Friday in limited release. This particular snapshot focuses on weddings in China, Kenya, the Netherlands, Lebanon and the U.S. The rituals are different in each, but participants’ joy doesn’t falter. 

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Hanson Celebrates 25th Anniversary With Throwback ‘Mmmbop’ Performance

Get ready to feel old!

Hanson has been a band for 25 years. Their oh-so-catchy 1997 hit “Mmmbop,” which apparently no one knows how to sing correctly, is officially 20 years old. That’s right, 20. 

To celebrate both their major milestones and the launch of an upcoming world tour, brothers Isaac, Taylor and Zac stopped by “Good Morning America” to perform the song that started it all. “Mmmbop” hit the top of Billboard’s Hot 100 when it came out, and somehow, it still stands up. 

The nostalgia is real. 

 Hit Backspace for a regular dose of pop culture nostalgia.

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