The CIA's 'enhanced interrogation' program gets a dry exposé in 'The Report'

Adam Driver plays Senate staffer Daniel Jones in "The Report." Adam Driver plays Senate staffer Daniel Jones in "The Report." Photo: Handout Courtesy Of Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon Studios Photo: Handout Courtesy Of Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon Studios Image 1 of / 3 Caption Close The CIA's 'enhanced interrogation' program gets a dry exposé in 'The Report' 1 / 3 Back to Gallery

It's hard to imagine a less sexy subject for a movie than the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence's 2014 report on the CIA's post-9/11 detention and interrogation program - even if you abbreviate that mouthful as the "torture report," and even if you cast Adam Driver (dreamy, amiright?) as the guy who was then-committee chairwoman Dianne Feinstein's dogged lead investigator.

It's a tough sell, even if you add Annette Bening as the California senator, and even if you throw in Jon Hamm and Maura Tierney for good measure, as President Barack Obama's chief of staff Denis McDonough and a (probably fictionalized) CIA official. This may be the world's first movie micro-targeted to several thousand of the people who live and/or work in Washington, and no one else.

Writer-director Scott Burns has certainly tackled difficult subject matter before. As recently as this fall, Steven Soderbergh's "The Laundromat" came out, with a screenplay by Burns that turned the Panama Papers scandal - about the leak of documents implicating an offshore law firm in financial chicanery - into a darkly comic meta-movie, with Antonio Banderas and Gary Oldman talking directly to the camera, while sipping cocktails.

Simultaneously funny and outrage-inducing, it was still a hard story to follow.

But Burns' "The Report," which also happens to have been produced by Soderbergh, takes a more conventional approach to storytelling, framing the narrative as flashbacks to unidentified "black sites," where we watch CIA contractors waterboard detainees (and worse).

Regularly, the film cuts back to Driver, as Senate staffer Daniel Jones, pounding away on a computer keyboard, scribbling furiously on a whiteboard, taking instructions from his stern-faced boss or taping up photos, dossiers and Post-it notes on the walls of his windowless office until it starts to resemble the lair of a serial killer.

The casting is impeccable, and includes Tim Blake Nelson as a Deep Throat-esque whistleblower who meets Dan in a parking garage to offer him cryptic assistance on his years-long investigation, which is said to have examined over 6 million pages of secret documents. But even with all the dramatic black-site interludes - which are viscerally upsetting to watch, and morally infuriating - and even with all the insights the film offers as to how officials could rationalize away such atrocities, there are only so many close-ups of Driver's disapproving face - or Bening's - an audience can take.

Just when emotions come to a boil, the film throws a bucket of cold water on them, cutting away from a scene of torture to, say, a scene of Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., played by John Rothman, sitting in a chair talking, or a meeting in which we listen to George W. Bush's deputy assistant U.S. attorney general, John Yoo (Pun Bandhu), offer up a rationale for skirting the Geneva Conventions.

Cinematic it ain't.

That's not to say that this isn't an important story, or a good movie. But by situating it within the context of a government report, albeit a bombshell one, "The Report" loses a little human sizzle. Still, it would have been worse if the movie had tried to artificially juice up the often tedious - but essential - work of government oversight, which is inherently time-consuming and dry.

The 2015 Oscar-winner "Spotlight" somehow managed to make investigative journalism seem thrilling, humane and even heroic, without resorting to flashbacks of child abuse. "The Report" doesn't quite manage the same trick.

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Two stars. Rated R. Contains brief nudity, some scenes of inhumane treatment and torture and coarse language. 118 minutes.

(The movie is distributed by Amazon Studios. Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Ratings Guide: Four stars masterpiece, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time.