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Secret d'état

Original title: Kill the Messenger
  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
50K
YOUR RATING
Secret d'état (2014)
A reporter becomes the target of a vicious smear campaign that drives him to the point of suicide after he exposes the CIA's role in arming Contra rebels in Nicaragua and importing cocaine into California. Based on the true story of journalist Gary Webb.
Play trailer2:20
17 Videos
44 Photos
True CrimeBiographyCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Journalist Gary Webb, California 1996, started investigating CIA's role in the 1980s in getting crack cocaine to the black part of LA to get money and weapons to the Contra insurgents in Nic... Read allJournalist Gary Webb, California 1996, started investigating CIA's role in the 1980s in getting crack cocaine to the black part of LA to get money and weapons to the Contra insurgents in Nicaragua.Journalist Gary Webb, California 1996, started investigating CIA's role in the 1980s in getting crack cocaine to the black part of LA to get money and weapons to the Contra insurgents in Nicaragua.

  • Director
    • Michael Cuesta
  • Writers
    • Peter Landesman
    • Gary Webb
    • Nick Schou
  • Stars
    • Jeremy Renner
    • Robert Patrick
    • Jena Sims
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    50K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Cuesta
    • Writers
      • Peter Landesman
      • Gary Webb
      • Nick Schou
    • Stars
      • Jeremy Renner
      • Robert Patrick
      • Jena Sims
    • 142User reviews
    • 171Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos17

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:20
    Trailer #1
    Clip
    Clip 1:33
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:33
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 1:11
    Clip
    Clip
    Clip 0:53
    Clip
    Kill The Messenger: Freeway Ricky Ross
    Clip 1:12
    Kill The Messenger: Freeway Ricky Ross
    Kill The Messenger: I'm Writing The Story
    Clip 1:10
    Kill The Messenger: I'm Writing The Story

    Photos44

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Jeremy Renner
    Jeremy Renner
    • Gary Webb
    Robert Patrick
    Robert Patrick
    • Ronald J. Quail
    Jena Sims
    Jena Sims
    • Quail's Girlfriend
    Robert Pralgo
    Robert Pralgo
    • LA Sheriff
    Hajji Golightly
    • DEA Agent
    Ted Huckabee
    Ted Huckabee
    • Bob
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    • Anna Simons
    Lucas Hedges
    Lucas Hedges
    • Ian Webb
    Rosemarie DeWitt
    Rosemarie DeWitt
    • Sue Webb
    Matt Lintz
    Matt Lintz
    • Eric Webb
    Parker Douglas
    • Christine Webb
    Kai Schmoll
    • Sacramento Journalist
    Joshua Close
    Joshua Close
    • Rich Kline
    • (as Josh Close)
    Paz Vega
    Paz Vega
    • Coral Baca
    Aaron Farb
    Aaron Farb
    • Rafael Cornejo
    Barry Pepper
    Barry Pepper
    • Russell Dodson
    Tom Jordan
    • San Francisco Judge
    Clay Edmund Kraski
    Clay Edmund Kraski
    • DEA Agent Jones
    • (as Clay Kraski)
    • Director
      • Michael Cuesta
    • Writers
      • Peter Landesman
      • Gary Webb
      • Nick Schou
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews142

    6.949.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8billygoat1071

    Risking for the Truth

    To be exact, Kill the Messenger isn't mainly about the CIA conspiracy which was exposed in 1996. This is more of Gary Webb's journey of unraveling some secrets behind the story and facing the consequences of revealing too much classified information to the public. The film shifts from conspiracy thriller to familial drama to give a clear statement of what struggles do honest journalists usually get. The direction seems to have higher interests when it comes to the conspiracy thriller mode, but when it eases down, it doesn't have the same enthusiasm. Thankfully, the star of the film, Jeremy Renner, carries the whole thing, making the overall experience absolutely engrossing.

    The film isn't really that straightforward when it comes to its historical side, though the first half does have a keen focus on picking up huge details from one source to another. The film triumphs when it only stays to that root, taking us to a process of how journalism works. But that point didn't get much of the flow, because again the whole message of this film is the danger of getting into this situation. The other half of the movie concerns Webb's protection with his family, while it is important to get to know about his personal life, it sort of feels like a stretched intrusion to what else interesting happening. The rest of the story, specifically the effects of the exposé to the public, remains to be a series of real life footage of mobs and interviews. The film comes to life once again when they face the actual consequences instead of verbalizing their paranoia.

    It could have been clunky, but the film totally benefits having Jeremy Renner. Even at its weakest scenes, the actor tend to bring real depth and tension, joining the audience to what his role is going through. This performance alone can be an instant recommendation to its entirety. The direction, as said, seems to spare its energy more on the investigation and suspense, which could have been straightforward in reporting the facts and putting the melodrama to the sidelines. The craft is solid as well, there are some strong production and stunning shots to be found.

    Kill the Messenger is more ambitious in its sentiments of valuing the truth and going against political corruption, but it doesn't satisfy enough to reporting its history, especially when the movie is really good at depicting it. It just eventually becomes a cautionary film for journalists about exposing a vulnerable truth, showing us the main character and his family possibly at risk after what he has done. It works when it finally acknowledges that the government is now their enemy and building suspense behind Webb's back, but when it focuses to the drama of his personal life, it doesn't seem to fit on the pieces, however whatever made it still thoroughly watchable, again, is the acting of Renner. This is the type of merit that steals much of the value of the film, even if it's flawed in storytelling, the appeal just keeps on going.
    10Kansas-5

    Superb acting,writing & three interwoven themes: government corruption, whistle blower retaliation, rare integrity

    I drove 140 miles, round trip, in foreboding weather, to attend the nearest U.S. opening.

    It was well worth it.

    First some context.

    I've freelanced for decades, including during a war, successfully exposed major governmental corruption, weathered concerted retaliation and have been regularly appalled at the weakness of corporate, bureaucratic and political weasels who abandoned ideals, professionalism and integrity, "going along to get along." I was aware of Webb's writing and vilification at the time they occurred, in the late '90s, but for over 50 years I had a front row seat for even pre-Nixonian "drug wars" through the "crack epidemic," genocidal American imperialism, and the treatment of many other reporters who dared challenge the status quo, who had the courage to painfully examine the quaint and naive notion of collective national decency.

    Webb's story, so artfully recounted and performed, was unfortunately true. He was accused of distorting the actuality of Reagan-era hypocrisy, but his reporting was accurate. He never accused the CIA of intentionally destroying the social fabric of minority communities, but made it clear that Harlem and Watts and Chicago's South Side were victims of "collateral damage," the inevitable consequences of the abandonment of any pretense of morality ostensibly possessed by the Reagan administration.

    Indeed, spurred by new information about the practice of questionable property seizures, Webb had once again picked at the scab covering the decade-old, gangrenous infestation of our government, later well described by Robert Parry in his October 2004 Salon piece, "How Kerry exposed the Contra-cocaine scandal." To get the story, Webb had exposed himself to blood curdling danger, both at his own home in the U.S. and on the scene, in Central America.

    Perhaps the worst betrayal of public trust by this film is depicted in recapitulation of the collective response of the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times, after being pressured by the CIA and the State Department. The papers' responded with hyperactive involvement in the personal destruction of Webb's reporting, reputation and life. Previously. the same papers, pressured by Reagan administration officials, buried Senator John Kerry's investigation, and shared subsequent malfeasance in their facilitating the Bush/Cheney administration's illegal and genocidal invasion and occupation of Iraq.

    The NY Times and Post had some odious history themselves. Reporters Ray Bonner and Alma Guillermoprieto were reassigned to boring beats after their courageous exposure of the incredibly savage El Mozote Massacre in El Salvador.

    There, the U.S. trained, funded and armed Atlacatl Battalion murdered almost a thousand peasants, largely neutral evangelical Protestants, and mostly women and children, on December 11, 1981. Stanley Miesler's El Mozote Case Study, published in the Columbia Journalism Review, exhaustively documented their fates.

    This film captured all those similar disgraceful elements. It needs to be seen by a wider audience just as it would be wise to make "Dr. Strangelove" part of a core curriculum in the formal education of American adolescents.
    10clg238

    Gripping and Important

    "Kill the Messenger" is both a very gripping film and an important film. Even though I know what our government was up to in those days (as if things have changed), I could hardly breathe, anticipating what would come next in the movie. My only concern about the film is the speculation that those who are ignorant of what occurred in those days would grasp that the money from drug sales went to buy weapons (it was almost glossed over). The acting in this film is superb, with one exception (the person who played Coral Baca--way overdone and not convincing). Knowing that the film is based on true events gives it amazing heft. I think it's an unforgettable portrayal of how our government can go astray--it's history but also a warning for those of us who have been demoralized by the current state of politics and who tend to trust certain names in the media. The film should be required viewing by every member of Congress, by every high school student, by those who call themselves journalists.
    6ferguson-6

    National Security and Crack Cocaine

    Greetings again from the darkness. This is one of those true stories that probably works better as a drama than as a documentary. Jeremy Renner brings passion and believability to his role as infamous journalist Gary Webb. This allows us to gain insight into Mr. Webb as a father, husband and man, rather than only as a fiery investigative reporter.

    You likely recall Webb's published story from 1996, when his research uncovered the likelihood that cocaine imported into the US was being sold as crack cocaine and the profits were going towards funding arms for the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. The kicker being that the CIA was well aware of these activities.

    The film presents Webb as an idealist, too naive to comprehend that the story would have ramifications to his employer, his family and his self. The use of actual news footage adds a dose of reality, as does the mention of Ronald Reagan, Oliver North, John Kerry ... and even the role Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky played in outshining the ultimate acknowledgment of Webb's work.

    The underlying message here ... beyond the governmental cover-up ... is the lack of a true free press. Of course, this issue remains front and center today, but in this particular instance, it's surprising to see the influence and pressure applied by outside forces. It's further proof that any hope for checks and balances from our news outlets was snuffed out many years ago.

    The movie is based on two books: Gary Webb's own "Dark Alliance" and Nick Shou's "Kill the Messenger". The frustration as a viewer is derived from the fragmented presentation brought on by steady stream of new characters who mostly only appear in one or maybe two scenes. The list of known actors is impressive: Rosemary DeWitt, Oliver Platt, Robert Patrick, Tim Blake Nelson, Michael Sheen, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Paz Vega, Barry Pepper, Michael Kenneth Williams, Andy Garcia, Gil Bellows, Lucas Hedges, Richard Schiff, and Ray Liotta. That should help explain what I mean by fragmented.

    The story is an important one and the film is worth seeing. It's impossible to not think of All the President's Men while watching. The Grandaddy of crusading journalism continues to produce heirs ... even those that are a black eye for the newspaper industry and our government.
    7Mr-Fusion

    Renner kills it

    "Kill the Messenger" details the tragic story of Gary Webb, the local newsman who blew the CIA/crack-in-L. A. story wide open. The scandal itself is heavy stuff, but the mini-biopic squeezed in there is also a downer. I enjoyed watching this film, but I think when the script gets distracted by family drama, things get muddled.

    It is a well-made film and the cast is remarkable, top to bottom. But this is a Jeremy Renner operation without question. He's completely invested in the role, Webb's integrity comes through; it's a performance that demands attention. Sure, I'd watch this again, and mostly for him.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Various members of the cast and crew have admitted to receiving government-level "push back" to the film, both during filming and in post-production.
    • Goofs
      Jerry Ceppos announces that Gary has been named the National Press Association's Journalist of the Year. There is no such thing as the National Press Association. He was named Journalist of the Year by the Bay Area Society of Professional Journalists. This is why he is speaking at the SPJ awards at the end of the film.
    • Quotes

      Gary Webb: American kids did die and are still dying, just not the ones you care about apparently.

    • Crazy credits
      Just before the closing credits, there is a short video showing the real Gary Webb at home with his children.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Jeremy Renner/Carol Burnett/Mario Batali (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Bring It On Home
      Written by Tommy Girvin and Don Cromwell

      Performed by Ransom

      Courtesy of 474 Records and Music Supervisor Inc.

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Kill the Messenger?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 26, 2014 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Site
      • Production Notes
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kill the Messenger
    • Filming locations
      • Atlanta, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Sierra / Affinity
      • Bluegrass Films
      • The Combine
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,450,846
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $941,809
      • Oct 12, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,218,973
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Datasat
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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