Popularity: 3 (history)
Director: | Gavin Hood |
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Writer: | Gavin Hood, Sara Bernstein, Gregory Bernstein, Marcia Mitchell, Thomas Mitchell |
Staring: |
The true story of British intelligence whistleblower Katharine Gun who—prior to the 2003 Iraq invasion—leaked a top-secret NSA memo exposing a joint US-UK illegal spying operation against members of the UN Security Council. The memo proposed blackmailing member states into voting for war. | |
Release Date: | Aug 30, 2019 |
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Director: | Gavin Hood |
Writer: | Gavin Hood, Sara Bernstein, Gregory Bernstein, Marcia Mitchell, Thomas Mitchell |
Genres: | Drama, Thriller, History |
Keywords | london, england, washington dc, usa, biography, politics, iraq war, calm, whistleblower, 2000s, admiring |
Production Companies | The Mark Gordon Company, Screen Yorkshire, Entertainment One, Sierra/Affinity, Clear Pictures Entertainment, Entertainment One Features, Classified Films |
Box Office |
Revenue: $0
Budget: $0 |
Updates |
Updated: Sep 13, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Keira Knightley | Katharine Gun |
Matt Smith | Martin Bright |
Ralph Fiennes | Ben Emmerson |
Adam Bakri | Yasar Gun |
Matthew Goode | Peter Beaumont |
Rhys Ifans | Ed Vulliamy |
Indira Varma | Shami Chakrabarti |
John Heffernan | James Welch |
Conleth Hill | Roger Alton |
Jack Farthing | Andy Dumfries |
MyAnna Buring | Jasmine |
Peter Guinness | TinTin |
Chris Reilly | Jerry |
Shaun Dooley | John |
Ray Panthaki | Kamal Ahmed |
Chris Larkin | Nigel Jones |
Monica Dolan | Fiona Bygate |
Clive Francis | Rear Admiral Nick Wilkinson |
Tamsin Greig | Elizabeth Wilmshurst |
Hattie Morahan | Yvonne Ridley |
Kenneth Cranham | Judge Hyam |
Jeremy Northam | Ken MacDonald |
Hanako Footman | Nicole Mowbray |
Angus Wright | Mark Ellison |
Katherine Kelly | Jacqueline Jones, MI6 Agent |
Raad Rawi | Mel |
Fiona Skinner | Policewoman |
Niccy Lin | Mi-Yung |
Lindy Whiteford | Edie Rielly |
Janie Dee | Jan Clements |
Will Barton | Paul Beaver |
Martin Bright | Male Journalist |
Vanessa Thorpe | Female Journalist |
Sophie Duval | Female Custody Sergeant |
Stuart Ramsay | Police Officer |
Jodie McNee | Duty Solicitor |
David Maybrick | Officer Pitt |
Simon Rogers | Officer Knowles |
Raquel Cassidy | Anne Emmerson |
Corinna Wilson | Young Romanian Girl |
Brett Allen | Duty Officer |
Patrick Moy | Driver |
Vinta Morgan | BBC Reporter |
Jessica Fostekew | Courtroom Guard |
Michael James | Clerk of the Court |
Gabrielle Downey | Mrs. Archer |
Tony Blair | Self (archive footage) (uncredited) |
George W. Bush | Self (archive footage) (uncredited) |
Katharine Gun | Self (archive footage) (uncredited) |
Colin Powell | Self (archive footage) (uncredited) |
Grant Crookes | GCHQ Security |
Rene Costa | Iraqi Protestor (uncredited) |
Neilesh Ambu | GCHQ Colleague (uncredited) |
Joanne James | Home Office Official Doncaster Airport (uncredited) |
Stuart Ramsay | Police Officer |
Name | Job |
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Gavin Hood | Director, Screenplay |
Florian Hoffmeister | Director of Photography |
Simon Rogers | Production Design |
Sara Bernstein | Screenplay |
Gregory Bernstein | Screenplay |
Paul Hepker | Original Music Composer, Orchestrator |
Claire Finlay-Thompson | Costume Design |
Kate Dowd | Casting |
Megan Gill | Editor |
Marcia Mitchell | Book |
Thomas Mitchell | Book |
Ben Clements | Art Direction |
Andy Watson | Art Direction |
Bill Crutcher | Supervising Art Director |
David Morison | Set Decoration |
Craig Mann | Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Sarah Franzl | Stunt Coordinator |
Nick Chopping | Stunt Driver |
Ben Dimmock | Stunt Driver |
Lee Millham | Stunt Driver |
Daniel Rawlins | Stunt Driver |
Karen Smithson | Stunt Driver |
Nancy Bray | Unit Production Manager |
Toni Staples | First Assistant Director |
Sarah MacFarlane | Second Assistant Director |
Jen Ainsley | Standby Art Director |
Laura Iwanyckyj | Assistant Set Decoration |
Florence Tasker | Graphic Designer |
Rosa Nolan-Warren | Art Department Assistant |
Jason Bond | Property Master |
Bob Charlton | Construction Manager |
Ossie McLean | "A" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Will Morris | First Assistant "A" Camera |
Chris King | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
Rupert Hornstein | First Assistant "B" Camera |
Aaran Lewis Leach | Second Assistant "B" Camera |
Jasmine Orrey | Camera Trainee |
Joe Steel | Digital Imaging Technician |
San Davey | Script Supervisor |
Jim Greenhorn | Production Sound Mixer |
Hugh Sherlock | First Assistant Sound Editor |
Dan Fontaine | Gaffer |
Simon Atherton | Best Boy Electric |
Sam Chapman | Electrician |
Richard Haigh | Electrician |
Robert Gavigan | Rigging Gaffer |
Alex Fraser | Key Grip |
Adrian Barry | Grip |
Robert Viglasky | Still Photographer |
Matt Squire | Still Photographer |
Nick Wall | Still Photographer |
Tapio Salmi | Makeup & Hair |
Anna Morena | Makeup & Hair |
Carolyn Cousins | Makeup & Hair |
Abby Graves | Makeup & Hair |
Helen Bolter | Costume Supervisor |
Charles Gillies | Costumer |
Charlotte Cox | Production Coordinator |
Kelsey Hammond | Production Coordinator |
Jamie Hollingworth | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Mari Hopkins | Production Secretary |
Kristian Turnbull | Production Secretary |
Cait Downs | Production Runner |
Amy King | Third Assistant Director, Second Unit First Assistant Director |
Emma Jane Richards | Location Manager |
Mark Wilson | Assistant Location Manager |
Jonathon Lawrence | Assistant Location Manager |
Joe Gradwell | Location Assistant |
Ben Arslanian | Production Accountant |
Becky Scurrah | Assistant Accountant |
Daniel Hamill | Assistant Accountant |
Martin Ainscough | Payroll Accountant |
Clare Harlow | Casting Associate |
Emma Bolton | Casting Assistant |
Traci Duran | First Assistant Editor |
PJ Harling | Assistant Editor |
Chase Keehn | Dialogue Editor |
Laura Wiest | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Luke Nagy | ADR Mixer |
Randy Wilson | Foley Supervisor, Foley Mixer |
John Sievert | Foley Artist |
Jason Charbonneau | Foley Artist |
Stefan Fraticelli | Foley Artist |
Ron Mellegers | Foley Mixer |
John Loranger | Foley Editor |
Kristi McIntyre | Foley Editor |
Justin Helle | Foley Editor |
Brent Brooks | Music Editor |
Bronson Buskett | Orchestrator |
Doug Delaney | Colorist |
Nadia Stacey | Hair Designer, Makeup Designer |
Paul Heasman | Stunt Driver |
Dani Casali | Makeup & Hair |
Mark Kilian | Original Music Composer, Orchestrator |
Matthew E. Butler | Thanks |
Name | Title |
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Elizabeth Fowler | Producer |
Melissa Shiyu Zuo | Producer |
Ged Doherty | Producer |
Sara Smith | Executive Producer |
Hugo Heppell | Executive Producer |
Sarada McDermott | Co-Producer |
Mark Gordon | Executive Producer |
Gavin Hood | Executive Producer |
Claudia Bluemhuber | Executive Producer |
Anne Sheehan | Executive Producer |
Matt Jackson | Executive Producer |
Jenna Berger | Associate Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 29 | 47 | 19 |
2024 | 5 | 28 | 63 | 16 |
2024 | 6 | 20 | 32 | 12 |
2024 | 7 | 24 | 51 | 15 |
2024 | 8 | 21 | 31 | 14 |
2024 | 9 | 18 | 28 | 11 |
2024 | 10 | 18 | 26 | 11 |
2024 | 11 | 20 | 49 | 13 |
2024 | 12 | 19 | 31 | 14 |
2025 | 1 | 23 | 46 | 15 |
2025 | 2 | 15 | 24 | 4 |
2025 | 3 | 6 | 16 | 1 |
2025 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
2025 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
2025 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
2025 | 7 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
2025 | 8 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
2025 | 9 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
2025 | 10 | 4 | 4 | 3 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 9 | 156 | 491 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 3 | 750 | 853 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 2 | 807 | 884 |
‘Official Secrets’ is an odd duck of a film. As much as it never quite finds its groove, it’s still an often thrilling and genuinely entertaining film, profiling an important figure in the movement against the Iraq War. Even after all this time, it’s still a shock to realise how thoroughly we were l ... ied to, and a film like ‘Official Secrets’ - even with its flaws - at least makes sure that we’re reminded of those lies for the future. It’s just a pity the film itself never finds the energy to really propel itself towards something great. It probably would have made a terrific miniseries, but as it stands, ‘Official Secrets’ is a befuddling yet gripping attempt at a political thriller. - Daniel Lammin Read Daniel's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-official-secrets-exposing-lies-at-a-time-of-war
Official Secrets leaks its thrills and political deceit through an accurate whistleblowing docudrama. Governments. A democratic selection of individuals to govern a nation with the public’s best interest taken into consideration. Providing foreign communications, budget monitoring and defensive secu ... rity. Essentially, attempting to make the country more sustainable for its future endeavours. Yet, here we are in the UK, squabbling endlessly over Brexit for months on end with not one single MP physically listening to the voices of the nation. A recurring distractive technique that acts as a vivid reminder of the toxic deceit that the Blair/Bush administration fabricated. Illegally, might I add. The 2003 Iraq Invasion was a preventable war. An unnecessary crime against humanity. Hood’s docudrama prompts us to relive the political agendas of socialist manipulation, by recounting GCHQ employee Katharine Gun’s life, but more specifically her intent on preventing a war. She leaked a sensitive memo that would expose illegal spy operations by the United States, as Bush attempted to blackmail the UN Security Council into voting for a war he deemed was inevitable. The deaths of millions of Iraqis, military forces and other officials as a result of his dictatorial administration. “Bush’s World” states the placards of London protests. Their blood, on his hands. And whilst the recounting of Gun’s “traitor”-like behaviour is formally structured as with most mechanically inclined political thrillers, Hood manages to competently evoke an emotional response. See, not all films have to be entertaining. Not all films have to include fictionalised strands for the sake of mainstream enjoyment. Films can be informative. And most of all, they can make you feel. Perhaps the most microscopic output of wonderment or fear. But Official Secrets is another beast. Official Secrets categorically boiled my blood. Shaking my head in disbelief by the events that happened, the overwhelming sense of betrayal flooded my soul. “9/11” was the most dreadful terrorist attack to ever take place. Fact. But Bush’s response was questionable at best, and the events depicted here act as a window into the political deceit that unfolded. Socialist propaganda. I shan’t force my own political viewpoints through, but suffice to say I loathe the Iraq Invasion with a passion. Quite frankly, it was disgusting. Hood maintains a semi-neutral perspective throughout, allowing audiences to question Gun’s motives as either inspiring or traitorous. Knightley commands every scene with a touch of naivety that progressed Gun into being a representative of the people. Fully acknowledging the infringement the Official Secrets Act, she took it upon herself to clear her conscious. Incredibly inspiring, and well documented by Hood who intricately ramped up the tension when required. Smith, portraying a reporter from The Observer, managed to break away from his infamous sci-fi character and delivered a nuanced yet emergent performance. Fiennes, Ifans and Goode also leading the charge for the excellent British cast. The Bernstein’s screenplay was tight, taut and tense. Many scenes, particularly when Gun is questioned by Scotland Yard detectives, evoked pure morality and bravery through the concise vocabulary used. Frequently referring to the governmental lies bestowed upon the nation. The various narrative time shifts did produce some inconsistent pacing, but manages to efficiently smooth out the wrinkles shortly afterwards. Hood never cloaks the story. He attacked Labour’s political agenda head on, without inferring his own perspective. By simply documenting the events, he has created one of the best thrillers of the year that really must be watched. There are no secrets left to hide anymore.
Engrossing! <em>'Official Secrets'</em> is terrific. How about that cast list? So many recognizable (or recognisable, for those using spell check...) faces appear throughout. Keira Knightley's performance is excellent, I am a fan of her from other things (small matter of <em>'Pirates of the Carib ... bean: The Curse of the Black Pearl'</em> being literally my favourite movie) but I haven't actually seen enough of her other work; yet to see a bad showing from her though. Ralph Fiennes and Matt Smith are just two of the other noteworthy names attached, that's without mentioning the likes of Rhys Ifans and Conleth Hill, among others. Given that, it comes as zero surprise for me to say that the acting in this movie is absolutely top, top notch. The 112 minute run time goes by in the blink of an eye, for a film without any major action or flashy set pieces it does a cracking job at keeping events onscreen feeling fresh. It really is expertly crafted together, the pacing is on point. The plot is one I was hooked on - I knew the general gist of the heinous real life events, just without knowing all the exact details. This is the third Gavin Hood-directed flick I've seen. I found <em>'X-Men Origins: Wolverine'</em> to be solid, but I mainly know of him from the very good <em>'Tsotsi'</em>. Like that aforementioned picture, I'd undoubtedly recommend this.