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  1. The Report (styled as The Torture Report) is a 2019 American historical political drama film written and directed by Scott Z. Burns that stars Adam Driver, Annette Bening, Jon Hamm, Ted Levine, Michael C. Hall, Tim Blake Nelson, Corey Stoll, and Maura Tierney.

  2. The Report: Directed by Scott Z. Burns. With Adam Driver, Corey Stoll, Evander Duck Jr., Jon Hamm. Idealistic Senate staffer Daniel J. Jones, tasked by his boss to lead an investigation into the CIA's post 9/11 Detention and Interrogation Program, uncovers shocking secrets.

    • (52K)
    • Biography, Crime, Drama
    • Scott Z. Burns
    • 2019-11-15
  3. The Report draws on a dark chapter in American history to offer a sober, gripping account of one public servant's crusade for accountability. Read Critics Reviews. TOP CRITIC. For a political...

    • (245)
    • Scott Z. Burns
    • R
    • Adam Driver
    • The Report (2019 film)1
    • The Report (2019 film)2
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    • The Report (2019 film)5
  4. Nov 15, 2019 · The Report. Amazon Prime. 118 minutes ‧ R ‧ 2019. Christy Lemire. November 15, 2019. 4 min read. “The Report” explores an alarming period in our country’s recent history: the CIA’s suspect detention and interrogation program following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

    • What Did The “Torture Report” find?
    • How Did The Torture Report Come Together?
    • What Happened After The Events Depicted in The Report?

    Jones and his team found that between 2002 and 2008, at least 119 detainees were held by the CIA in covert locations around the world, known as “black sites.” The CIA admitted at least 26 of the detainees were “wrongfully” held. According to the Committee’s executive summary, “interrogations of CIA detainees were brutal and far worse than the CIA r...

    The tapes investigation

    The investigation into the CIA’s interrogation program began in 2007, when the New YorkTimes reportedthat the CIA had destroyed tapes of interrogations in 2005. Two years before Feinstein became Jones’ boss, West Virginia Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller was the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and he asked Jones to review the CIA documents to determine what was on the tapes. Before working for Sen. Rockefeller, Jones had been an FBI analyst in the International Terrorism Oper...

    The larger investigation into the CIA interrogation and detention program

    In March 2009, in response to Jones’ report, the Committee voted14-to-1 to launch a larger investigation into the CIA’s detention and interrogation program. Sen. Feinstein had become the Chairman of the Committee at this point, and asked Jones to stay on to head up the investigation. He was initially told it would take about a year to complete. Around the same time, Attorney General Eric Holder announced he was broadening a criminal investigation into the CIA, and as a result, the CIA said th...

    “The summer from hell”

    Sen. Feinstein sent the report for comment and review by the CIA, other intelligence agencies and the White House. In June 2013, the Committee heard back that the CIA had major problems with the report and claimed it contained inaccuracies. Over the summer, Jones and his team began meeting with the CIA to work through these sections. Jones describes the period as the “summer of hell.” “We knew what the facts were and we would basically say, you know, ‘The ocean water is blue. Here it is.’ And...

    The film ends in 2014, after the Senate releases Jones’ findings. But the issues it explores persist in the present day. In 2015, the Senate passedthe McCain-Feinstein Anti-Torture Amendment, which banned any further use of “enhanced interrogation techniques” on detainees. In the spring of 2018, Gina Haspel — who, per the Times, oversaw the torture...

  5. In a thriller based on actual events, an idealistic Senate staffer leads an investigation into the CIAs post-9/11 Detention and Interrogation Program, uncovering the lengths to which the agency went to hide a brutal secret from the American public.

  6. Nov 15, 2019 · The story of Daniel Jones, lead investigator for the US Senates sweeping study into the CIA's Detention and Interrogation Program, which was found to be brutal, immoral and ineffective. With the truth at stake, Jones battled tirelessly to make public what many in power sought to keep hidden. Scott Z. Burns. Director, Writer.