The Fifth Estate - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Fifth Estate"
The Fifth Estate (2013)
Timing: 2:8 (128 min)
The Fifth Estate - TMDB rating
6.028/10
975
The Fifth Estate - Kinopoisk rating
6.573/10
35481
The Fifth Estate - IMDB rating
6.2/10
44000

Actors and characters

Photo Daniel Brühl #20771Photo Daniel Brühl #20772Photo Daniel Brühl #20773Photo Daniel Brühl #20774

Daniel Brühl

Daniel Brühl
Character Daniel Domscheit-Berg
Photo Anthony Mackie #6431Photo Anthony Mackie #6432Photo Anthony Mackie #6433Photo Anthony Mackie #6434

Anthony Mackie

Anthony Mackie
Character Sam Coulson
Photo David Thewlis #11593Photo David Thewlis #11594Photo David Thewlis #11595Photo David Thewlis #11596

David Thewlis

David Thewlis
Character Nick Davies
Photo Alicia Vikander #35051Photo Alicia Vikander #35052Photo Alicia Vikander #35053Photo Alicia Vikander #35054

Alicia Vikander

Alicia Vikander
Character Anke Domscheit-Berg
Photo Dan Stevens #22693Photo Dan Stevens #22694Photo Dan Stevens #22695

Dan Stevens

Dan Stevens
Character Ian Katz
Photo Stanley Tucci #6088Photo Stanley Tucci #6089Photo Stanley Tucci #6090Photo Stanley Tucci #6091

Stanley Tucci

Stanley Tucci
Character James Boswell
Photo Laura Linney #35202Photo Laura Linney #35203Photo Laura Linney #35204Photo Laura Linney #35205

Laura Linney

Laura Linney
Character Sarah Shaw
Photo Carice van Houten #86877Photo Carice van Houten #86878Photo Carice van Houten #86879Photo Carice van Houten #86880

Carice van Houten

Carice van Houten
Character Birgitta Jonsdottir
Photo Peter Capaldi #22578Photo Peter Capaldi #22579Photo Peter Capaldi #22580Photo Peter Capaldi #22581

Peter Capaldi

Peter Capaldi
Character Alan Rusbridger
Photo Alexander Beyer #79358
Alexander Beyer
Character Marcel Rosenbach
Photo Anatole Taubman #39493

Anatole Taubman

Anatole Taubman
Character Holger Stark
Photo Michael Culkin #44924

Michael Culkin

Michael Culkin
Character Ralph Zilke
Photo Alexander Siddig #36903Photo Alexander Siddig #36904

Alexander Siddig

Alexander Siddig
Character Dr. Tarek Haliseh
Photo Axel Milberg #98692
Axel Milberg
Character Hans
Photo Philip Bretherton #124196

Philip Bretherton

Philip Bretherton
Character Bill Keller
Joseph Kinyua Muriuki
Character John Paul Oulu
Peter King Nzioki
Character Oscar Kamau Kingara
Photo Lydia Leonard #80154Photo Lydia Leonard #80155

Lydia Leonard

Lydia Leonard
Character Alex Lang
Photo Amir Boutrous #45116
Amir Boutrous
Character Mutassim Al-Gaddafi
Photo Mimi Ferrer #291116
Mimi Ferrer
Character Shida Haliseh
Photo Gudmundur Thorvaldsson #111714
Gudmundur Thorvaldsson
Character WikiLeaks Staffer #1
Photo Hera Hilmar #55236Photo Hera Hilmar #55237Photo Hera Hilmar #55238Photo Hera Hilmar #55239

Hera Hilmar

Hera Hilmar
Character Wikileaks Staffer #2
Photo Nigel Whitmey #35552

Nigel Whitmey

Nigel Whitmey
Character General Thomason
Photo Camilla Rutherford #43710
Camilla Rutherford
Character Guardian Lawyer
Photo Ludger Pistor #27821

Ludger Pistor

Ludger Pistor
Character Supervisor
Ben Rook
Character Julian Assange jeune

What's left behind the scenes

  • Initially, Jeremy Renner was considered for the role of Assange, and James McAvoy for the role of Domshait-Berg.
  • The film’s original title was “The Man Who Sold the World”.
  • Julian Assange, after reading the initial script, reacted negatively to the idea of the film and called it “a complete lie” and “propaganda,” particularly due to hints at Iranian nuclear developments. Assange refused to meet with Benedict Cumberbatch, but then began corresponding with him by email, which helped Cumberbatch in his work on the role.
  • The research conducted by screenwriter Josh Singer for the film was fraught with some risk. At one point, Singer’s computer was attacked by hackers. Shortly thereafter, FBI agents came to his home and began asking various questions, justifying their visit by stating that Singer’s name appeared in an investigation of Chinese hackers.
  • Julian Assange launched the WikiLeaks project in 2006. For the first time, it became possible to tell the truth about the activities of the government and expose corporate crimes without fear of persecution and harassment by the state apparatus. Documentation appeared on the site testifying to a contract killing in Somalia; money laundering by the management of a Swiss bank; corruption in the highest echelons of power in Kenya. The operating procedures of the Guantanamo Bay high-security prison were published; evidence of a nuclear disaster in Iran; documents confirming the operation of a chemical waste dump on the Ivory Coast; evidence of violations of banking regulations in Iceland, and much more. The Guardian described WikiLeaks as “an elusive and uncriticizable leak machine.” However, in 2010, WikiLeaks exceeded all permissible risk limits by publishing the so-called “mega-leak” – a massive amount of top-secret information jealously guarded by American diplomats and military personnel. This included 91,000 documents on the war in Afghanistan, 400,000 documents on the war in Iraq, and 251,287 documents related to diplomatic missions around the world. All of this became public knowledge. WikiLeaks was about to feel the full power of the US government. Military technical specialist Bradley Manning, who provided documentation on the war in Iraq, was arrested almost immediately. Since the publication on the WikiLeaks portal was protected by an ingenious encryption system, Manning confessed to a familiar hacker, Adrian Lamo, that he was the one who leaked the information about Iraq. It was at Lamo’s instigation that Manning was subsequently arrested. The WikiLeaks website caused an incident for which a response was created. As the leak continued, the US government began to say that WikiLeaks posed a serious threat to national security, even though at that time the question of whether WikiLeaks had violated any law of the United States of America had not even been raised.
  • Filming began in Iceland, on a small island of volcanic origin, on the very edge of the Arctic. This location was impossible to recreate anywhere else. Against the backdrop of the so-called Blue Lagoon (a picturesque landscape with a solidified river of cooled lava and active geysers), one of the scenes of a quarrel between Cumberbatch and Brühl's characters was filmed, despite the deafening howling wind and almost horizontal rain.
  • In Berlin, filming took place at several memorable locations, including the Berlin Cathedral.
  • An interesting and simultaneously challenging task for artist Mark Tildesley was recreating the famous Tachles Art House in Berlin, where Daniel Domshait-Berg spent some time. The building was constructed in 1909 in the Jewish quarter of East Berlin. Initially, it housed a department store, and during the war – an SS headquarters. In 1943, it held French prisoners of war. Notably, the store and prison transformed into a headquarters for artists, anarchists, and freethinkers from all over the world. The building was turned into a gallery, teeming with various forms of artistic expression both outside and inside. For a long time, the building served as a kind of symbol of freedom for Berlin’s creative community. For several years, the city authorities unsuccessfully tried to close Tachles. Unfortunately, in 2012, the attempts were successful. The building closed and soon turned into an ordinary residential building. After receiving official permission to film, Tildesley and his team began painstakingly recreating the building’s former grandeur from the inside. They even restored a nightclub that once functioned in Berlin. Specifically for this purpose, they found the former owners of the club and agreed with them, renting the original furniture and paintings that were hung on the walls, even returning the fire-breathing dragon above the bar.
  • In July 2012, it was reported that Jeremy Renner showed great interest in the role of Julian Assange. However, in October of the same year, it was announced that the leading role went to Benedict Cumberbatch.
  • Joel Kinnaman auditioned for the role of Daniel Domshait-Berg.
  • At the heart of WikiLeaks lies what is known as Assange's secure posting platform, allowing anyone to upload information and documents anonymously. A special technology of deniable encryption allowed the source not to fear that their actions could be traced. The system, developed by Assange, Suelette Dreyfus, and Ralph Winman, was initially intended to be transferred to human rights activists working in countries with repressive regimes, but ultimately the system proved useful for the WikiLeaks base. Soon, the site switched to a more sophisticated encryption system developed by a programmer known as the Architect. Now, even WikiLeaks employees did not receive data on which informant leaked specific secret documentation to the portal. Even after arrest and under torture, WikiLeaks employees would not have been able to name their sources; they simply did not know them.
  • The character 'Ziggy' is based on a WikiLeaks volunteer – Sigurdur Thordarson, who turned out to be an FBI informant.
  • Julian Assange launched the WikiLeaks project in 2006. For the first time, it became possible to tell the truth about the activities of the government and expose corporate crimes without fear of persecution and harassment by the state apparatus. The website featured documentation testifying to a contract killing in Somalia; money laundering by the management of a Swiss bank; corruption in the upper echelons of power in Kenya. The operating procedures of the Guantanamo Bay high-security prison were published; evidence of a nuclear disaster in Iran; documents confirming the operation of a chemical waste dump on the Ivory Coast; evidence of violations of banking regulations in Iceland, and much more. The Guardian described WikiLeaks as "an elusive and uncriticizable leak machine." However, in 2010, WikiLeaks exceeded all permissible risk limits by publishing the so-called "mega-leak" – a massive amount of top-secret information jealously guarded by American diplomats and military personnel. This included 91,000 documents on the war in Afghanistan, 400,000 documents on the war in Iraq, and 251,287 documents related to diplomatic missions around the world. All of this became public. WikiLeaks was about to experience the full power of the US government. Military technical specialist Bradley Manning, who provided documentation on the war in Iraq, was arrested almost immediately. Since the publication on the WikiLeaks portal was protected by a sophisticated encryption system, Manning confessed to a familiar hacker, Adrian Lamo, that he was the one who leaked the information about Iraq. It was at Lamo's behest that Manning was later arrested. The WikiLeaks website caused an incident for which a response was created. As the leak continued, the US government began to say that WikiLeaks posed a serious threat to national security, even though at that time there was no question of WikiLeaks violating any law of the United States of America.
  • Julian Assange launched the WikiLeaks project in 2006. For the first time, it became possible to tell the truth about the activities of the government and expose corporate crimes without fear of persecution and harassment from the state apparatus. The website published documentation testifying to a contract killing in Somalia; money laundering by the management of a Swiss bank; corruption in the upper echelons of power in Kenya. The operating procedures of the Guantanamo Bay high-security prison were published; evidence of a nuclear disaster in Iran; documents confirming the operation of a chemical waste dump on the Ivory Coast; evidence of violations of banking regulations in Iceland, and much more. The Guardian described WikiLeaks as an “elusive and uncriticizable leak machine.” However, in 2010, WikiLeaks exceeded all acceptable risk limits by publishing the so-called “mega-leak” – a massive volume of top-secret information jealously guarded by American diplomats and military personnel. This included 91,000 documents on the war in Afghanistan, 400,000 documents on the war in Iraq, and 251,287 documents related to diplomatic missions around the world. All of this became public knowledge. WikiLeaks was about to feel the full power of the US government. Almost immediately, Bradley Manning, a military technical specialist who provided documentation on the war in Iraq, was arrested. Since the publication on the WikiLeaks portal was protected by a sophisticated encryption system, Manning confessed to a familiar hacker, Adrian Lamo, that he was the one who leaked the information on Iraq. It was at Lamo’s behest that Manning was subsequently arrested. The WikiLeaks website became the cause of an incident, to combat which it was created. As the leak continued, the US government began to say that WikiLeaks posed a serious threat to national security, although at that time there was not even a question of whether WikiLeaks had violated any law of the United States of America.
  • The character 'Ziggy' is based on a WikiLeaks volunteer – Sigurdur Thordarson, who turned out to be an FBI informant.
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