Showing posts with label wikileaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wikileaks. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: Did Assange kill WikiLeaks movie?



Roxanne Roberts The Washington Post
10/22/13, 1:12 PM EDT |


So, that Julian Assange movie is officially a flop. The Internet is abuzz with theories about why “The Fifth Estate” bombed at the box office, bringing in a minuscule $1.7 million on opening weekend. Maybe no one cares about WikiLeaks, or Benedict Cumberbatch-as-Assange can’t carry a movie. The most-posed theory: The real-life Julian Assange’s attempted takedown could have been the deciding factor. A look at how the WikiLeaks founder launched his own personal anti-”Fifth Estate” campaign this month:


Oct. 10: Assange writes a long open letter to Cumberbatch: “I believe you are a good person, but I do not believe that this film is a good film,” and adds that the movie is riddled with errors.

Oct. 13: According to the Hollywood Reporter, Assange tells the Hollywood Foreign Press Association the movie is “doomed to fail because its anti-WikiLeaks stance doesn’t give moviegoers the kind of underdog story they want.”


Monday, October 14, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch, just as lovely as you think he is / NEWS

WOMAN CITIZEN
Anna Sayfa
13 October, 2013


TORONTO — Benedict Cumberbatch sweeps into an empty hotel ballroom, cutting a natty figure in a black-and-white glen plaid jacket, checked shirt and striped canvas sneakers. “I see you have your festival bag,” he says confidingly, taking note of the crumpled Toronto International Film Festival tote at an interlocutor's feet. It’s a substitute for the one that broke at customs, overstuffed with a laptop and sundry travel necessities.

“That’s exactly what happens to me,” he offers enthusiastically. “Because I’m packing all the time. I’m always killing really perfectly good bits of luggage by shoving loads of stuff in them, and then the seams break, handles drop off, you know.”


Sure, we know. But, let it be stipulated, no one can really know what it’s like to be Cumberbatch, who has had a year that has been, well, especially packed. The 37-year-old Brit, who has been a cult heartthrob among the PBS-BBC-plummy-literary-adaptation set, played the Necromancer in last year’s “Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.” But he truly burst into mass popular consciousness this past summer, when he thoroughly dominated the role of Khan in “Star Trek Into Darkness.” On Oct. 18, he will star as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in “The Fifth Estate” and has supporting roles in two high-profile films arriving soon: “12 Years a Slave,” directed by Steve McQueen, and “August: Osage County,” adapted from Tracy Letts’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play.

“A packed year, exactly,” Cumberbatch says with a reflective sigh. “It’s been amazing. It’s been amazing. But two years really, because ‘Trek’ we filmed the beginning of last year, and before that — God, it winds back quite a ways. I mean, literally, just sort of the height of what I could ever imagine myself being asked to do as an actor has been going on pretty much now for about four or five years.”


Cumberbatch speaks at a breathless clip, his words spilling out in a joyous, oncoming rush that suggests he really is thrilled to be here, however tempting it would be to read his gee-whiz protestations as the practiced act of a canny ingenue. He is, quite simply — and this is for all those self-proclaimed Cumberb**ches out there who have designated him an unlikely pin-up idol — just as chiseled, engaging, well-mannered and disarmingly modest as they imagine in their wintry, wind-tossed fantasies.

He comes by it honestly. Cumberbatch is the son of two actors — Timothy Carlton and Wanda Ventham — who grew up in London and is as at home in the posh precincts of Burke’s Peerage (an ancestor was a consul under Queen Victoria) as in the klieg-lighted world of Show People. (So how did Cumberbatch end up with his last name? It was his father’s surname; Carlton a middle name turned stage name. So Benedict has simply reclaimed the family name.) But his career has followed contours that even his parents couldn’t prepare him for. He’s done high-profile work in such highly regarded films as “Atonement,” “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” and “War Horse,” as well as on television, in “Hawking,” “Sherlock” and “Parade’s End.” He’s a celebrated figure of the London stage: In 2010 he earned kudos for his performance in a revival of Terence Rattigan’s “After the Dance,” and the following year he won an Olivier Award, along with fellow Sherlock Jonny Lee Miller, for his work in an experimental version of “Frankenstein,” adapted by Danny Boyle. It was “After the Dance,” he says, that marked the turning point when the phone started ringing. It hasn’t stopped.


“I knew when I started out that I wanted something very different from what Mom and Dad had anyway, but I didn’t know quite what — I didn’t know how it would manifest — but even they look at it and go, ‘Whoa,’ ” Cumberbatch says. “It’s beyond everyone’s sort of expectation. But also the workload and everything, it’s different to their game.”

It’s enough to turn a boy’s head. But Cumberbatch, along with such contemporaries as Michael Fassbender, is forging the kind of career that actors covet these days, combining recurring roles in huge franchises like “Star Trek” and “The Hobbit” with artier indie fare. His role model, he says, is James McAvoy (his one-time co-star in “Starter for 10”), who along with Fassbender appears in the “X-Men” movies.

“I know James really well. I’ve sort of been working with him for a while, and I just love what he did,” Cumberbatch explains. “He let the game come to him. It’s about the quality of his work, and I wanted the same thing. I didn’t want to go and try and force myself on people. I wanted people to go, ‘Oh, that guy could be quite interesting,’ and that’s sort of what’s happening.”


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: JULIAN ASSANGE, OFFICIALLY THE BIGGEST A-HOLE IN THE WORLD

ESQUIRE
By Paul Schrodt



In case you needed any more proof the open letter has officially jumped the shark, Julian Assange has come aboard. Assange wrote a letter to Benedict Cumberbatch, the actor who plays him in the upcoming film The Fifth Estate, after Cumberbatch made an attempt to contact Assange. Now that letter is posted on WikiLeaks. (And, by the way, just because you WikiLeak your open letter doesn't make it any less open.) Assange's letter smacks of his usual smugness, but it also seeks to do the two things all inappropriate open letters do:

The letter 1) establishes a false sense of intimacy between Assange and Cumberbatch. "The bond that develops between an actor and a living subject is significant."

And 2) It suggests Assange has anything of historical importance to tell Cumberbatch and the world. He does not.







READ MORE HERE:

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: WikiLeaks Publishes Assange's Private Letter to Benedict Cumberbatch


Cuberbatch-assange

MASHABLE
October 9, 2013
By Fran Berkman

WikiLeaks' most recent release may not reveal any government secrets, but it does set a new standard for the age-old term, "no hard feelings."

The controversial website published a letter Wednesday written by founder Julian Assange to actor Benedict Cumberbatch, who portrays Assange in the upcoming film, The Fifth Estate. The letter is dated Jan. 15, 2013, about a week before the film's production began, and it appears to be a response to Cumberbatch's request for an in-person meeting. While Assange is cordial to Cumberbatch, he ultimately denies the actor's request.



"I hope that you will take such directness as a mark of respect, and not as an unkindness,"

Assange wrote. "I believe you are a good person, but I do not believe that this film is a good film." "I believe you are a good person, but I do not believe that this film is a good film."

The letter suggests Cumberbatch wanted to meet, so he could familiarize himself with Assange's mannerisms, to better portray him in the film. Assange wrote that he did not want to meet because he thought it would "validate" the film, which is "based on a deceitful book by someone who has a vendetta against me and my organisation."

In his letter, Assange even suggested that Cumberbatch give up his role in The Fifth estate.

"You will be used, as a hired gun, to assume the appearance of the truth in order to assassinate it. To present me as someone morally compromised and to place me in a falsified history. To create a work, not of fiction, but of debased truth.

"Not because you want to, of course you don't, but because, in the end, you are a jobbing actor who gets paid to follow the script, no matter how debauched.

"Your skills play into the hands of people who are out to remove me and WikiLeaks from the world.

"I believe that you should reconsider your involvement in this enterprise."

READ MORE HERE:  http://mashable.com/2013/10/09/assange-cumberbatch-letter/

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Brits with Birthdays: Dan Stevens’ Baby Blues Turn 31


Dan Stevens in a July 2011 portrait taken in Beverly Hill. (Chris Pizzello/AP Images)

BBC AMERICA
By Leah Rozen | Posted on October 7th, 2013


They’re not joking about those baby blues. (AP)



Dan Stevens, the blue-eyed British heartthrob whose departure from Downton Abbey at the end of last season left many fans feeling bereft, turns 31 this Thursday, Oct. 10.

The actor, who played likable Matthew Crawley on the popular period drama, quit the show after the third season when his contract ended. He has since moved to the New York area to appear on Broadway in The Heiress and then acted in three movies. He has also slimmed down, losing more than 25 pounds.

One of those films, The Fifth Estate, a biopic about WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, opens this Friday. Fellow rising British star Benedict Cumberbatch plays Assange while Stevens has a supporting role as a London journalist.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2013/10/brits-with-birthdays-dan-stevens-baby-blues-turn-31/

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Interview: Daniel Bruhl, Benedict Cumberbatch and Dan Stevens of 'The Fifth Estate'


ALL MEDIA NY
by Samantha Wilson, Assistant Editor;

By now, the public is well-versed in the story of WikiLeaks and its prolific founder, Julian Assange. The Australian visionary is the subject of The Fifth Estate, the new film starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Assange and Daniel Brühl as his confidant and right hand man Daniel Domscheit-Berg.

While many expected a biopic to emerge based on Assange and his incredible story, it’s unlikely that they theorized the source material would be Domscheit-Berg’s frank and candid memoir Inside WikiLeaks, or that the film would be told largely from his perspective. As the tagline for the movie reads, “you can’t expose the world’s secrets without exposing your own.”



Cumberbatch, Brühl and Dan Stevens, who portrays Guardian reporter Ian Katz in the film, sat down at the Toronto International Film Festival to talk about preparing to tell a remarkable true story, their take on WikiLeaks and getting in contact with subjects who are often hard to find.

When Assange heard that the project was being made, he reached out to Cumberbatch and urged the actor not to take the part. Being a consummate professional, Cumberbatch justified his reasons for doing the film with Assange, and “that was where that ended.”



“It was important to me to portray him as a three-dimensional human being and not get into a slagging match about whether he was good or bad,” Cumberbatch said. “I wanted to portray human characteristics about a man at the forefront of an incredible media revolution, with incredible ideas, whose controversy was borne out of that primarily and not get bogged down in character assassinations which is so easy to come by, because people want a headline, they want to grab something and run with a two-dimensional story. And I like the way the film tackles that.”

Cumberbatch believed that it’s easy to perceive Assange as a villain after seeing his portrayal in the media, so he was happy to participate in a film that, while still showing a true representation of his character, also shows what Assange is like when the cable news cameras aren’t rolling


“The character assassinations came hot on the foot of all the kind of shifting perspectives and press war and everything that went on at the time of the leak, so I think a lot of people’s perspective on him is very crude,” he said. “So anything that flashes out who he is as a three-dimensional human being I think is to his benefit, and god knows what he’ll think of that, but as an audience I think you can understand more of someone when they are part of something that’s universal to all of us. And while, you know, I think it’s very clear he doesn’t want the message to get confused with the messenger, and that’s happened.”

For Brühl, speaking to Domscheit-Berg was a little more forthcoming than Cumberbatch’s experience with Assange.



“When I first heard about WikiLeaks a couple of years ago, I was sure that sooner or later they're going to make a movie about it,” Brühl said. “So it was strange to then participate in that project and to play Daniel…He invited me a couple of times to his place and you know explained me a lot about the, this intense relationship with Julian.”

Cumberbatch noted the complex relationship between Domscheit-Berg and Assange is more than meets the eye.

“Daniel is no stooge, you know, he’s not this follower, he’s a smart guy, he’s an activist, he’s incredibly, you know, pragmatic. He’s not just a sort of blind acolyte. I think Julian has a magnetic hold over people and I think he’s an incredible spokesperson for an extraordinary idea that was borne out of his realization of it. And you know, he has very complex relationships with people because of that.”



During his time spent with Domscheit-Berg, Brühl gained an understanding for his character and his perspective in the WikiLeaks affair. Though he seems decidedly “Team Daniel,” he acknowledged how audiences could leave the theater feeling like they should be rooting for both Assange and Domscheit-Berg at the same time, comparing the experience to his film Rush, which screened at TIFF at the same time as The Fifth Estate.

“In a way it's similar to Rush because…you have the villain and the goody and you stay with one and only have empathy with one character,” he said. “But eventually you have empathy with both, in both movies.  I found that quite interesting; that's another parallel. It doesn't make a final judgment, the movie.  And you know it's quite neutral in a way.  And I found it very interesting and a good idea to give Julian Assange the last word, you know, to let the film end like this.”



By portraying a journalist, Dan Stevens got a unique perspective on the privacy versus transparency issue that runs deep throughout the WikiLeaks affair itself, and throughout the movie. His character, he says, comes at this issue differently than Assange, which makes for great viewing.

“There are certain moral judgments that have to be made and I think as a more traditional journalist like say Ian Katz, those considerations were more at the floor than to someone like Assange, who… I guess they sort of… they come at it from slightly different angles you know,” Stevens said. “And that in itself provokes an interesting conversation about how much of the human element do we consider, if this is putting people's lives at risk, should it be out there or actually do people just need to know the truth and damn the consequences and it's a very, very difficult question.  But that in itself makes for great drama, you know.”


READ MORE HERE: http://www.allmediany.com/articles/8061-interview-daniel-br%C3%BChl-benedict-cumberbatch-and-dan-stevens-of-039the-fifth-estate

Saturday, September 14, 2013

BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH ON MANNING: HE TOOK AN OATH AND HE BROKE THAT OATH



BREITBART TV
by MARY CHASTAIN  14 Sep 2013, 12:33 PM PDT

British actor Benedict Cumberbatch shot to fame with his role as Sherlock Holmes, and now he's creating Oscar buzz as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in the movie The Fifth Estate. Cumberbatch was interviewed by The Guardian about the movie, and it may come as a surprise that the British actor does not necessarily agree with Assange and whistleblowers Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden.

A day before filming began, Cumberbatch said Assange sent him a 10-page email begging him not to do the movie. Cumberbatch considered it, but ultimately told Assange he would make the movie. He said it would not be a documentary, but only for entertainment.



Cumberbatch told The Guardian he took the role because he is "a vain actor," not because of moral reasons or to celebrate what Assange did. The Afghanistan war leaks Assange published in 2010, given to him by Manning, did horrify Cumberbatch, but it was not enough to change his mind. Cumberbatch is sympathetic towards Manning, who was sentenced to 35 years in prison for the leaks, but thinks he should not receive a presidential pardon.

"But he broke a law. He knew what he was doing." Manning has applied for a presidential pardon, but Cumberbatch can't see why Obama should grant it. "He did what he did out of a conviction that an alarm bell needed to be sounded. But his superiors might have been right to say to him, it's not your position to be worried about it within the hierarchy of the military organisation, which is why he had to be sentenced. He took an oath, and he broke that oath."


READ MORE HERE: http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Hollywood/2013/09/14/Cumberbatch-on-Manning-He-Took-an-Oath-and-He-Broke-That-Oath

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch rules Toronto fest

Benedict

Andrea Mandell, USA TODAY
September 9, 2013

TORONTO — It's unquestionable that Benedict Cumberbatch is the man of the moment at the International Film Festival. Not that it doesn't come with a price.

"It's great. I wish I could enjoy the moment a bit more, (but) that's always the thing, isn't it?" says Cumberbatch, ensconced in a hotel room at the Ritz-Carlton. It's a gorgeous fall day outside, but with three prestigious movies to promote (Julian Assange biopic The Fifth Estate, the Steve McQueen-directed slavery film Twelve Years a Slave and August: Osage County) the closest he's getting to the great outdoors is by squinting.



"I can see it through the crack in the door," says the star, who may tie Oprah for how many interviews a human is capable of participating in (on Saturday alone he topped out at 64).

Cumberbatch grins, shrugs. "High-class problems."

And no matter that his fans ("Cumberladies," as he politely rephrases the more crass term) are clamoring for him on the sidewalks. "I still get star-struck," he says. "Whether it's Sandra Bullock or Nicole Kidman. I met Brad (Pitt) backstage at Twelve Years a Slave two nights ago. I really liked meeting him."


READ MORE HERE: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2013/09/09/benedict-cumberbatch-is-the-man-of-the-moment-in-toronto/2785297/



Friday, September 6, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch looks hot in dapper suit with black quiff at The Fifth Estate premiere with Dan Stevens


NOW DAILY
September 6, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch stepped out at the premiere of his new film The Fifth Estate looking very dapper last night.

The actor wore a smart black suit and bow tie on the red carpet at the Toronto International Film Festival in Canada.


His hair - dyed dark for his role in Sherlock - was slicked back into a neat quiff.


Benedict was greeted by excited fans who had been waiting to catch a glimpse of the star and he flashed a huge grin as he waved to the crowd.



The 37-year-old was joined at the premiere by his Fifth Estate cast mates, including Daniel Brühl, Swedish actress Alicia Vikander and Downton Abbey's Dan Stevens.



Read more at http://www.nowmagazine.co.uk/celebrity-news/547628/benedict-cumberbatch-looks-hot-in-dapper-suit-with-black-quiff-at-the-fifth-estate-premiere-with-dan-stevens

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch to head into jungle for 'Lost City Of Z'

 Benedict Cumberbatch as John Harrison in 'Star Trek Into Darkness'.

DIGITAL SPY
Published Wednesday, Sep 4 2013, 7:41pm EDT
By Jack Klompus 

Benedict Cumberbatch has been linked to a role in Lost City Of Z, the upcoming explorer movie directed by We Own The Night's James Gray.

The actor will star in the film based on David Grann's bestselling book. Cumberbatch is thought to have left Guillermo del Toro's Crimson Peak for this, rather than Star Wars Episode 7 which he has denied involvement in.


Lost City Of Z, adapted by Gray, will feature Cumberbatch as Percy Fawcett, a British Colonel who disappeared into a jungle trying to find a legendary City of Z during the 1920s, Deadline reports.

Brad Pitt's Plan B production company is behind the movie and it was first believed Pitt would be playing the part of Percy.

Cumberbatch can next be seen in WikiLeaks drama The Fifth Estate.



Read more: http://www.digitalspy.com/movies/news/a512750/benedict-cumberbatch-to-head-into-jungle-for-lost-city-of-z.html#ixzz2e1gitHvQ
Follow us: @digitalspy on Twitter | digitalspyuk on Facebook


Thursday, August 29, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch and Daniel Brühl feature in trailer and stills from The Fifth Estate



FANCARPET
29 August, 2013

The release of Bill Condon and R.J. Cutler's The Fifth Estate is fast approaching and The Fan Carpet are pleased to make available some new stills, the trailer and the UK Quad poster!

Triggering our age of high-stakes secrecy, explosive news leaks and the trafficking of classified information, WikiLeaks forever changed the game. Now, in a dramatic thriller based on real events, “The Fifth Estate” reveals the quest to expose the deceptions and corruptions of power that turned an Internet upstart into the 21st century’s most fiercely debated organization.

Also starring Carice Van Houten, Stanley Tucci, Peter Capaldi, Anthony Mackie, Laura Linney and David Thewlis, The Fifth Estate opens on October 11.



Friday, August 23, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: The Cumberbatch Quadruple Threat


THE ATLANTIC WIRE
ESTHER ZUCKERMAN 1:22 PM ET

If you're not obsessed with British Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch yet—and there are many who are (see: Cumberbitches)—this fall might convert you. Cumberbatch appears (in one form or another) in no fewer than four films due out this fall and he plays a wide variety of roles to boot. His biggest part comes in The Fifth Estate (Oct. 18), Bill Condon's WikiLeaks drama, in which Cumberbatch will have to capture the creepy intelligence of Julian Assange. 

In addition to his star turn as Assange, Cumberbatch also has roles in 12 Years a Slave (Oct. 18), based on a true story of a free man sold into slavery in the antebellum south, and August: Osage County (Dec. 25), an adaptation of the Pulitzer-winning play. We're interested to see what he does in the latter considering he will be playing against his usual hyper-intelligent type: "Little" Charles Aiken is a simple man who has an affair with someone he's really not supposed to have an affair with. (When we say "really" in this context we mean "really.") And, of course, if that's not enough Cumberbatch for you, you can hear his voice—if not his corporeal form—as the titular dragon in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (Dec. 13). 




Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch questions decision to detain David Miranda

METRO
21 August, 2013

Sherlock star questions David Miranda terror detention  Benedict Cumberbatch holds up a sign in protest over David Miranda’s detention (Picture: WENN)

Sherlock actor Benedict Cumberbatch has launched a silent protest over the decision to detain the partner of a Guardian journalist under anti-terror laws.

Cumberbatch, who later this year will be seen in cinemas portraying WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, brandished a series of messages criticising the government and police over the detention of David Miranda, the partner of Glenn Greenwald.

The 37-year-old held up four pieces of paper to photographers who were hoping to catch a glimpse of him and Sherlock co-star Martin Freeman during filming on location in London.

‘Questions we have a right to ask in a democracy – [David] Cameron, Theresa May, GCHQ, teachers, parents, each other… Hard drives smashed, journalists detained at airports. Democracy?’ the first two pages read.

Pages three and four continued: ‘Schedule 7 Prior restraint – is this erosion of civil liberties winning the war on terror?


‘What do they not want you to know? And how did they get to know it? Does the exposure of their techniques cause a threat to our security or does it just cause them embarrassment?’

It emerged over the weekend that Mr Miranda had been detained under the controversial Schedule 7 section of the Terrorism Act 2000, which only applies to airports and ports, and had his laptop, mobile phone and memory stick seized.

Mr Greenwald, who has written stories for the Guardian based on material passed to him by National Security Agency whistle-blower Edward Snowden, said the detention was an act of intimidation, while Mr Miranda has threatened legal action if his possessions are not returned.


READ MORE HERE: http://metro.co.uk/2013/08/21/sherlock-star-benedict-cumberbatch-questions-decision-to-detain-david-miranda-3933173/

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

New Poster For THE FIFTH ESTATE Features Benedict Cumberbatch And Daniel Brühl

WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS
Posted by Michelle McCue
August 19th, 2013 at 1:58 pm

5thEstate_1-Sheet_v9_sm[1]

The story begins as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and his colleague Daniel Domscheit-Berg (Daniel Brühl) team up to become underground watchdogs of the privileged and powerful. On a shoestring, they create a platform that allows whistleblowers to anonymously leak covert data, shining a light on the dark recesses of government secrets and corporate crimes. Soon, they are breaking more hard news than the world’s most legendary media organizations combined. But when Assange and Berg gain access to the biggest trove of confidential intelligence documents in U.S. history, they battle each other and a defining question of our time: what are the costs of keeping secrets in a free society—and what are the costs of exposing them?”

A dramatic thriller based on real events, THE FIFTH ESTATE reveals the quest to expose the deceptions and corruptions of power that turned an Internet upstart into the 21st century’s most fiercely debated organization.


read more here:http://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/08/new-poster-for-the-fifth-estate-features-benedict-cumberbatch-and-daniel-bruhl/

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: 'The Cumberbitches have got my back' if Julian Assange attacks Wikileaks film


The-Fifth-Estate.jpg


ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
by Adam Markovitz on Aug 6, 2013 at 2:42PM   @amrkvtz

An ordinary person might understandably get jitters about playing Wikileaks founder Julian Assange in a movie. After all, he’s a guy who has tussled with banks, political groups, and even governments and lived to tell the tale. But as any self-respecting Benedict Cumberbatch fan — or “Cumberbitch,” as some call themselves — knows, the Brit actor is anything but ordinary.


The Sherlock and Star Trek Into Darkness star donned a series of white wigs and fake teeth to play Assange in The Fifth Estate (out Oct. 18), a drama that tracks Wikileaks’ rise to power. And he jokes that, thanks to his fans, he’s fully prepared for Assange to open fire. ”I’m sure he’ll go after me. … I’m not a bank with offshore accounts in the Canaries, I don’t fiddle my taxes, I’m not wanted for war crimes. If he goes after me, it’s going to be a waste of his extraordinary talent. But if he does, I kind of respect that because he needs to be able to answer back,” says Cumberbatch. “Anyway, the Cumberbitches have got my back, so I’ll be fine.”




READ MORE HERE: http://insidemovies.ew.com/2013/08/06/benedict-cumberbatch-cumberbitches-assange/



Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: Julian Assange biopic The Fifth Estate to open 2013 edition of the Toronto International Film Festival


NATIONAL POST
David Rockne Corrigan | 13/07/23
Last Updated: 13/07/23 2:31 PM ET
@rocknecorrigan

Bill Condon’s The Fifth Estate, the film about Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, will open the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

The film, starring Daniel Brühl and Benedict Cumberbatch as Julian Assange, follows the story of WikiLeaks, the website dedicated to exposing government corruption and abuses of power.



“Information is the potent currency of our time, and we’ve found a film that charts just how volatile it can be,” said Cameron Bailey, artistic director of TIFF. “With The Fifth Estate, this yera’s festival kicks off with an electric, timely drama that promises to get people talking. We’re thrilled to welcome Bill Condon back to Toronto with another terrific film.”

The Fifth Estate follows the story of Julian Assange and his partner Daniel Domscheit-Berg (Brühl) as they team up to become underground watchdogs, and the eventual consequences of exposing state secrets and corporate crimes.


Director Condon was last at the festival in 2004, with his film Kinsey, starring Liam Neeson. His first TIFF film was Sister, Sister in 1987.

“On behalf of the cast and filmmaking team, we are really honoured to open the festival,” said Condon. “Toronto has such enthusiastic audiences and I look forward to sharing the film with them.”

The Fifth Estate is based on the book Inside WikiLeaks, by Domscheit-Berg, as well as WikiLeaks by David Leigh and Luke Harding. It will be have its North American release on October 18.


READ MORE HERE: http://arts.nationalpost.com/2013/07/23/julian-assange-biopic-the-fifth-estate-to-open-2013-edition-of-the-toronto-international-film-festival/

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch set to make a splash at Toronto film fest

By John R. Kennedy   
Global News


TORONTO — This year’s edition of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) may as well be subtitled “A celebration of Benedict Cumberbatch.”

The 37-year-old British actor, who recently appeared in the blockbuster Star Trek Into Darkness, has several films making their world debut at the festival, including 12 Years a Slave with Brad Pitt and August: Osage County co-starring Meryl Streep.

Cumberbatch also stars in TIFF’s opening night presentation, The Fifth Estate. He portrays WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in Bill Condon’s film about Assange and his colleague Daniel Domscheit-Berg (Daniel Bruhl).

Cumberbatch is certain to walk some red carpets at TIFF and will return to the city in the winter to film Crimson Peak.


READ MORE: http://globalnews.ca/news/735617/benedict-cumberbatch-set-to-make-a-splash-at-toronto-film-fest/

Colin Firth heads to Toronto film festival (photos)

Colin Firth Colin Firth arrives at Toronto's Pearson International Airport to attend the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival.

Donna Freydkin
USA TODAY 
12:56 p.m. EDT July 23, 2013

With slightly more than one month left to go, we're getting a good idea of the big names slated to hit this year's Toronto film festival.

It's always a very fun and very star-studded week. The actor with what appear to be the most films this year is Benedict Cumberbatch.








The fun runs Sept. 5-15, and here's a few of the most high-profile films set to screen there:

The Fifth Estate, about WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (starring Cumberbatch).

August: Osage County, about the most twisted family you've seen in years (starring Meryl Streep, Julia Roberts, Ewan McGregor, Cumberbatch, Abigail Breslin, Sam Shepard and Chris Cooper).


READ MORE HERE: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/people/2013/07/23/toronto-films/2578921/