Civil War movie set in near-future US poses questions about politics and journalism

entertainment
Civil War Movie Set In Near-Future Us Poses Questions About Politics And Journalism
Andrew MacDonald, Kirsten Dunst, Alex Garland and Allon Reich attend the special screening of Civil War in London. Photo: Getty Images
Share this article

Hanna Rantala

Filmmaker Alex Garland wants Civil War, a tense thriller about a group of journalists documenting societal collapse as they chase a scoop in a conflict-torn United States, to be a conversation starter.

Set in the near future and both a war film and a road movie, Civil War sees fictional Reuters photographer Lee (Kirsten Dunst) and reporter Joel (Wagner Moura) take to the road with the aim of reaching Washington DC, before it falls to a rebel faction.

Advertisement

To Lee's dismay, aspiring young photographer Jessie (Cailee Spaeny) and veteran reporter Sammy (Stephen McKinley Henderson) also tag along for the obstacle-ridden trip from New York.

"It is an anti-war movie, but it's really got two other focuses," Garland said at the film's premiere in London on Tuesday.

"It's a story about journalists and why we need them and what they do. But it's also asking a question, which is why is good journalism not getting the traction? What's gone wrong? And then a very similar question about sort of polarised populist politics, extremist politics."

Taking on the role of Lee, who is worn out from years of covering war zones, was a first for Hollywood veteran Dunst.

Advertisement

"I feel like I haven't played a role like this. And it's nice to have a woman who has this job as a photojournalist be the lead of an action movie about war," she said.

Dunst, 41, drew inspiration from the late reporter Marie Colvin for her performance and familiarised herself with camera equipment.

"She (Colvin) really embodied kind of the qualities I wanted to bring to Lee," Dunst said.

Advertisement
Kirsten Dunst attends the special screening of Civil War at The Cinema In The Power Station on March 26th, 2024 in London, England. Photo: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

"The thing I wanted to make sure of the most was that my camera looked like part of my hand. That was my biggest worry, that it didn't look authentic."

Garland, director of Ex Machina and writer of 28 Days Later and The Beach began writing Civil War in 2020, at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and in the lead up to the US presidential election that year.

Writing helped him process the anxiety of the time and address the questions he had.

"I see it as being a film which is trying to have a conversation," he said.

"This is really an audience movie," added Dunst. "It's not telling you what to think. It's not giving you sides. It's really about you, which I think is unique."

Civil War starts its global cinematic rollout on April 10th.

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com