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Download Film Snowden (2016)

5/22/2017

SNOWDEN - Official Trailer - You. Tube. Snowden, the politically- charged, pulse- pounding thriller starring Joseph Gordon- Levitt and Shailene Woodley, reveals the incredible untold personal story of Edward Snowden, the polarizing figure who exposed shocking illegal surveillance activities by the NSA and became one of the most wanted men in the world. He is considered a hero by some, and a traitor by others.

No matter which you believe, the epic story of why he did it, who he left behind, and how he pulled it off makes for one of the most compelling films of the year.

Oliver Stone Interviews Putin on U. S.- Russia Relations, 2. Election, Snowden, NATO & Nuclear Arms. This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

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Critics Consensus: Snowden boasts a thrilling fact-based tale and a solid lead performance from Joseph Gordon-Levitt, even if director Oliver Stone saps the story of. This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Snowden. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the. Download Snowden.2016.720p.BluRay.x264-FOXM . Torrent hash: 116649def1cf035a4e7263366c9dd47b2f2de3d0.

Oliver Stone Interviews Putin on U.S.-Russia Relations, 2016 Election, Snowden, NATO & Nuclear Arms. Snowden est un film réalisé par Oliver Stone avec Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Shailene Woodley. Synopsis : Patriote idéaliste et enthousiaste, le jeune Edward Snowden.

AMYGOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow. The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan Gonz. His films have included Platoon, JFK, Wall Street, Born on the Fourth of July. Over the past two years, Stone conducted more than 2. Russian President Vladimir Putin, covering issues from NATO to the nuclear arms race, the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and the 2. U. S. Showtime is airing a four- part special this week called The Putin Interviews.

This is an excerpt. OLIVERSTONE: But you do realize how powerful your answer could be. If you said subtly that you prefer X candidate, he would go like that tomorrow. And if you say you didn’t like Trump or something—right?—what would happen? He’d be—he’d win, right? You have that amount of power in the U.

S. PRESIDENTVLADIMIRPUTIN: . This is one of the principles we stick to in our work. OLIVERSTONE: Thank you, sir. PRESIDENTVLADIMIRPUTIN: My pleasure. OLIVERSTONE: We’ll see you tomorrow, talk about some heavier stuff. PRESIDENTVLADIMIRPUTIN: Thank you, sir.

All the best. See you tomorrow. AMYGOODMAN: That’s an excerpt from Oliver Stone’s new Showtime series The Putin Interviews. Oliver Stone is also releasing a companion book compiling the transcripts of his 2. Vladimir Putin. Oliver Stone joins us here in studio for the rest of the hour. Welcome back to Democracy Now!

OLIVERSTONE: Thank you. Thank you, Amy. AMYGOODMAN: It’s good to have you with us. OLIVERSTONE: Good to see you, Juan. AMYGOODMAN: There is a lot to talk about here and a number of clips we want to play. OLIVERSTONE: Yeah.

And—AMYGOODMAN: But—OLIVERSTONE: Can I just say? That clip, by the way, is from before the election. It was shot on 2. That was his attitude about the—and he said things before the election also, very polite and never anything bad- mouthing any of the candidates. He’s always been—and he made it very clear back then. I just want to—because we come back to see him after the election, in the fourth chapter. AMYGOODMAN: And that’s very interesting.

This series, the first two ran this week. They’ll continue to run. OLIVERSTONE: Right. AMYGOODMAN: And then tonight the third, and tomorrow the fourth.

OLIVERSTONE: Right. AMYGOODMAN: And it’s in that fourth hour where you really get into, because you’ve returned February 2. OLIVERSTONE: That’s correct. AMYGOODMAN: It’s after the election.

It’s after Donald Trump becomes president. OLIVERSTONE: Right. AMYGOODMAN: And you really move in on asking him about whether the Russian government hacked the 2. Talk about his response. OLIVERSTONE: Oh, you want to cut right to that part of it, because it has to do with Washington today. Believe me, we didn’t see this coming, and we never expected we’d have to go back for a fourth trip, because we all thought Ms. Clinton was going to win.

So, I’m sure he did, too. I’m sure he did, too.

I think he was as surprised as anybody, any one of us. But as he says in the fourth version, he says, . We will work with anybody. Romance Movies Download Alive And Kicking (2017) here. It’s not our policy to intervene, certainly not a country as big as America. I think money influences elections.

You could say Mr. Koch, the Koch brothers, perhaps—you could say Sheldon Adelson, people like this, do add up. You could say all these lobbies add up. AIPAC adds up. But, you know, Russia’s influence—I was wrong.

You see, when I looked at that clip, I was thinking—you know, I’m saying—I don’t think he has that kind of influence. I think I was putting him on a bit and saying—I’m encouraging him to take a position. That’s sort of—that’s what an interviewer does sometimes. You exaggerate. But I don’t think he could make a difference if he said he hated Trump. AMYGOODMAN: But you get into that issue of the elections and the hacking of the election. OLIVERSTONE: Yes. AMYGOODMAN: Sure, all of the different forces—OLIVERSTONE: Yeah.

AMYGOODMAN: —that you just described affect elections, but you drill down on this issue of did Putin, the Russian government, hack the elections. OLIVERSTONE: As I said, he denies it completely, I mean, without even—he thinks it’s a silly thing. It’s an internal American political struggle. And he has a point. I also went into, extensively, if you remember, right after that, into cyberwarfare, because cyberwarfare is a new form of it. We talked about this when I was here for Snowden, in depth actually. Snowden revealed cyberwarfare to us.

So much is happening on that front. And one thing he did express very strongly is, we have—the Russians have proposed a treaty, a cyber treaty, to the United States. It’s been in—on the desk for about a year now, and he has no response from the U. S. He would like one. I think we need one. And we can talk about that, too, if you want.

It’s very dangerous, cyberwarfare, because of all the rumors and the easy—easy- to- mislead misinformation, fingerprints, thin—the thin evidence that’s presented. It’s very possible now, with the CIA and the—you know, Julian Assange, when he—the Vault 7 leaks a few weeks ago—you covered them, I believe—it was clear that a company like the CIA could in fact forge the footprints of any country onto any hack and make it look like they planted the malware. JUAN GONZ? And I saw the Colbert segment that was really an attempt to really go after you in an uncharacteristic way, even for Colbert. But because there’s a long history in the United States of journalists going—trying to get interviews. I think of Barbara Walters with Fidel Castro. I think of, going back, even Edgar Snow, Red Star Over China—OLIVERSTONE: Yeah, yeah. JUAN GONZ. And Wilfred Burchett—Wilfred Burchett did many stories—OLIVERSTONE: Yeah.

JUAN GONZ. So I’m wondering how—why this one is—this time around, they’ve been really blasting you. OLIVERSTONE: Well, this is—listen, you go back in American history—we did Untold History with you, too, and we talked about this bias against Russia since 1.

And we didn’t even recognize Red Russia until 1. Roosevelt. He was the first one to build any kind of—and he was the best—he believed in an alliance, a grand alliance, after the war, with Russia, the U. Monster Project (2017) Movie In Hd. S., England and China. That was—and if he had lived a few more months, I think it would have been a completely different framework for the world.

I think Harry Truman had a more limited view. We talked about this, too. But Russia, the bias against Russia, they did it. It goes to Ian Fleming novels, to James Bond, the feeling that SMERSH is behind it, or—Mr. Putin has been characterized in a cartoonish way as a Dr. You don’t go there.

And I’m surprised, because Americans should really, if they—they think of him as this threat to America. Our generals say they’re the number one existential threat to the United States. If you believe that, then you should know more about them and what—who their leader is and what they’re actually saying, because they don’t print that. I don’t see him speaking to American people in our language. I mean, he’s always interrupted with a dub, a bad dub, generally speaking, with a harsh voice, a football voice, or, sorry, a football coach’s voice. This is a chance to hear him in his own language. I think the interpreter is very good.

He speaks softly, firmly, softly. AMYGOODMAN: Well, you don’t put a translator over him. You have—OLIVERSTONE: No, no. AMYGOODMAN: You have subtitles, so that makes an enormous difference. OLIVERSTONE: I think there’s a harmony there. And I think, after—you know, I’m a filmmaker.

I’m approaching it not a newsman. So I see it as a 4- hour project. And in those four hours, you will cover from 2. AMYGOODMAN: How did you—how did you end up doing this? OLIVERSTONE: By accident, kind of. I was doing the Snowden movie in Germany, and we were communicating a lot with Ed.

He lived in Moscow at the time, and we were going there—still is, I’m sorry, not . And at one of those nine times I went over there, I met Mr. Putin for the first time. Gorbachev and, you know, another world.