Orwell: 2+2=5

2025

Action / Biography / Documentary / History

7
IMDb Rating 6.8/10 10 995 995

Director

Top cast

Salman Rushdie as Self - Author, The Satanic Verses
Vladimir Putin as Self - President of Russia
Damian Lewis as George Orwell
Vyacheslav Molotov as Self - Former Prime Minister of the Soviet Union
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 1080p.WEB.x265
927.45 MB
1280*536
English 2.0
R
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 31
1.86 GB
1920*804
English 5.1
R
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 70
1.68 GB
1920*804
English 5.1
R
Subtitles us  fr  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 24

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by mdw0526 8 / 10

An excellent document of chilling clarity about our current global situation...

"Orwell: 2+2=5" is one of the most viscerally frightening films I've seen in years, not slasher scary, but that slow-boil dread of realizing we're the frog in the pot and the water has long been simmering. Raoul Peck (whose James Baldwin documentary was luminous) assembles archival footage, Orwell's own words, and a brisk intellectual biography to show exactly how his warnings in "1984" have seeped into the marrow of modern life. The throughline from Orwell's vision to our surveillance capitalism, doublespeak, and billionaire techno-authoritarianism lands like a gutpunch. With every movement recorded, every stray thought mined by the almighty algorithm, I'm left wondering how did we allow this to happen when visionaries spelled it out for us so clearly? Peck threads together Orwell's experiences, the Iraq War's manufactured truth, the unprovoked attack on Ukraine, and the historical rewriting of January 6th with chilling clarity. It's heavy, frightening, and eye-opening. We stumbled onto it via a Top 10 list and now I can't stop thinking about it.
Reviewed by peter0969 8 / 10

Watched at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival.Raoul Peck has always been an underrated filmmaker who has made great documentaries in his career. With his latest focusing on the works of George Orwell, Peck goes raw with the portrait of Orwell's work and purpose. Providing a strong and powerful anti-fascist documentary and demonstrating the warnings, meaning and realism of what Orwell has said, and focused on.Using great colorful presentations, interesting editing choices and presentation, Peck's direction on how information is presented, described and situated feels striking, important and engaging. With narration of the writings Orwell speaking, many of the themes, topics and concepts explored throughout were intriguing, as it reflects on what Orwell viewed about the world, the negative effects of fascism and the warnings about how reality and society can be changed because of politics and the dark humanities of human worlds. Alongside with using archival footage and interesting creative choices on the sound designs, visuals and presentation, it doesn't shy away from being quite loud, and raw. Allowing the views to see the negative effects about totalitarianism and the brutality of it.I'm honestly quite surprised this movie got made, especially since our current political times is very messy. Overall, Raoul Peck has made his most angry and raw documentary in his entire career. A striking and powerful documentary that does reflect a lot about the current United States of America and the Trump Administration.
Reviewed by brentsbulletinboard 7 / 10

A Comprehensive, Relevant Profile

George Orwell (born Eric Arthur Blair, 1903-1050), author of such legendary novels as the allegorical Animal Farm and dystopian 1984, has been called one of the greatest and most insightful writers of the 20th Century. And, in light of recent history, he's also been widely regarded as one of the most prescient, a plainspoken scribe who clearly saw the future long before it happened and wasn't afraid to straightforwardly call it for what it would become. In recognition of that legacy, Orwell's life, work and outlooks are now the subject of this latest production from prolific activist documentarian Raoul Peck. The film weaves together a biography of the author, the central themes of his journalistic and literary works, and illustrations of how those notions have materialized in the "management" (or, one might more accurately say, manipulation) of social, political and world affairs over the years, with an especially heavy emphasis on the present day. The filmmaker cites myriad examples of these manifestations to show just how on target Orwell was in predicting what would lie ahead, both in the places where he lived (England, Spain and Burma (now Myanmar)), as well as other locales around the globe, including Russia, Ukraine, Haiti, France, Latin America, Asia, and, most importantly, the US. And, while Peck largely targets the policies and practices of the right, he's not afraid to take on anyone whose dogma is so rigid that it throws circumstances off balance for everyone. Most notably, though, the picture details just how insidious these initiatives can be, agendas accomplished through the skillful "handling" of language, media, beliefs and actions that lead to intentional, calculated and shameful obfuscation, creating purposely misleading impressions in the minds of an unwittingly susceptible public. The narrative places much emphasis on the signature double-talk expressions Orwell features in his narratives (especially 1984), including such meaningless phrases as "War is peace," "Freedom is slavery" and "Ignorance is strength," slogans that say nothing but become widely embraced with relentless and intimidating repetition. The director's inclusion of these references thus depicts the deliberate war on truth being waged by those in power who will do anything to maintain their control over it, particularly when dealing with a compliant, quiescent population. These themes are further supported by an array of clips from other fictional and documentary works, such as the 1954, 1956 and 1984 versions of "1984," "I, Daniel Blake" (2016), "Land and Freedom" (1995), "Minority Report" (2002), and "Orwell Rolls in His Grave" (2003), to name a few. And further enhancement is provided in numerous voiceover sequences from Orwell's own writings, deftly narrated by Damian Lewis. All told, these elements provide a comprehensive look at the author and his work, as well as its relevance in today's world. With that said, however, some aspects of this offering could use some work, most notably in the organization of its content, its overreliance at times on material that needs to be read (and that often flies by too quickly) and an occasional tendency toward redundancy, elements that have been known to intrude upon other films by this director. In addition, "Orwell: 2+ 2 = 5" has frequently been termed (and quite accurately at that) as the scariest picture of 2025, primarily due to its inclusion of some troubling graphic imagery (sensitive viewers take note). Nevertheless, this is an important film for our times, one that viewers should not be afraid to watch considering the stakes involved. Indeed, turning a blind eye might be easier to do in the moment - but probably not in the long run.
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