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Reality (2023)Reality (2023)

Reality (2023)

This surreal filmmaking experiment yields mixed results

Drama

7.0

movie

United States of America
English
Character-driven, Gripping, Intense
2023
Female director, Tina Satter
Benny Elledge, John Way, Josh Hamilton
83 min
TL;DR
This aptly named movie takes a novel — if not entirely successful — approach to conveying the tension between truth and fiction in Trump-era America

Synopsis

rotten tomatoes
imdb
wikipedia
On June 3, 2017, 25-year-old Reality Winner returns from running errands to find two FBI agents at her home in Augusta, Georgia. An Air Force veteran and yoga instructor, Winner spends the next two hours being questioned about her work as an intelligence contractor — specifically, whether she leaked a classified document about Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. elections.

Our Take

7.0
Farah Cheded

This taut chamber piece about NSA whistleblower Reality Winner (yes, that’s her real name) is based on the FBI’s account of her interrogation one June day in 2017. “Based on” doesn’t quite capture Reality’s exhaustive commitment to the facts, though, because this movie is essentially a dramatic reading of a verbatim transcript of the FBI agents’ recording that day. The only time it breaks with reality is when it reaches a redacted portion of the transcript, at which point characters glitch out of view, leaving us staring into the blank set around them. Otherwise, every cough, false start, and even every off-topic remark is recreated with exacting precision here, lending the film a paradoxically stilted, slightly stagy air. But rather than pull you out of the proceedings, Reality’s palpable artificiality only immerses us into the uneasy tension and surreality that its anxious protagonist must have been feeling that day.

That anxiety is contagious, thanks to the movie’s clinical style and central performance. The camerawork is largely unblinking, moving in uncomfortably close on Reality (Sydney Sweeney) as two FBI agents (Josh Hamilton and Marchánt Davis) subject her to their bizarre hot-cold interrogation, which ranges from seemingly friendly inquiries about her dog to jugular-aimed questions about the allegations against her. Sweeney shoulders all this pressure remarkably well, deftly keeping us as much in the dark as Winner tried to keep the FBI in — which makes not knowing the real story a benefit, rather than a barrier, to watching Reality.

Outside of Sweeney’s commanding performance, Reality feels somewhat limited by its absolute loyalty to the FBI’s transcript, though. Much of the film’s 83-minute runtime is dedicated to recreating the text, which leaves only a few minutes at the end for it to express its own point of view on Winner’s actions. Though these scant moments make for a compelling reframing of the charges against Winner, they feel overshadowed by and separate from the movie’s rigorous devotion to the transcript, which ultimately means Reality can’t quite transcend its status as merely an interesting filmmaking curio.

What stands out

Sweeney’s performance is the high point of Reality, giving solid form to the creeping sense of dread pervading throughout the movie. Director Tina Satter (who also created and directed the stage play Reality is adapted from) and her behind-the-scenes collaborators strip everything down to put Sweeney in the spotlight, allowing her ample opportunity to showcase her formidable talents (if her diverse career hadn’t already convinced you of them). Even if it ultimately hits a ceiling, the movie’s central turn, mastery of tone, and Satter’s literalizing of the tension between truth versus fiction in Trump-era America make it an intriguing experiment worth watching.

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