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ORWELL : 2+2=5

( 2025 )
Feature Documentary Competition |
 
United States
,
France
 |
 English |
 119 min

About the film

Raoul Peck’s Orwell: 2+2=5 merges archival adaptations of 1984 with pressing contemporary imagery, creating a daring cinematic essay that tackles disinformation, authoritarianism, and the enduring relevance of Orwell’s warning in today’s fractured world

Director

Raoul Peck

Raoul Peck, born in Haiti in 1953, lived in Congo, France, Germany, and the United States. He first trained as an engineer before studying directing at the DFFB in Berlin. His body of work, spanning fiction and documentary, is consistently marked by political urgency and critical rigor. After his early films in the 1990s, he gained prominence with Lumumba (2000) and Sometimes in April (2005). Already well known among cinephiles, he achieved worldwide recognition with I Am Not Your Negro (GFF 2017), nominated for an Academy Award. With the minisseries Exterminate All the Brutes (2021), he deepened and radicalized his reflection on colonialism. His latest work, Orwell: 2+2=5 (2025), premiered at Cannes.

Producer

Alex Gibney, Raoul Peck, George Chignell, Nick Shumaker

Production Company

Screenplay

Raoul Peck

Cinematography

Julian Schwanitz, Ben Bloodwell, Stuart Luck, Aera, Maung Nadi, Roman T

Editing

Alexandra Strauss

Sound

Benoît Hillebrant

Cast

Damian Lewis as the voice of George Orwell

Contacts

International Sales: Goodfellas, France, feripret@goodfellas.com

Producer

Alex Gibney, Raoul Peck, George Chignell, Nick Shumaker

Production Company

Screenplay

Raoul Peck

Cinematography

Julian Schwanitz, Ben Bloodwell, Stuart Luck, Aera, Maung Nadi, Roman T

Editing

Alexandra Strauss

Sound

Benoît Hillebrant

Cast

Damian Lewis as the voice of George Orwell

Contacts

International Sales: Goodfellas, France, feripret@goodfellas.com

More About Film

As in his remarkable I Am Not Your Negro, where Raoul Peck retraced the writings and life of James Baldwin to craft a film-essay on the systemic nature of racism, the Haitian director now immerses himself in the work and biography of George Orwell, producing a documentary as clear as indispensable. With Orwell: 2+2=5 Peck approaches Orwell not as a mere canonical author, but as a critical conscience of the twentieth century and of our time. The film interlaces archives, interviews, reconstructions and inserts, shaping a narrative between biography and collective history.Thanks to full access granted by Orwell’s heirs, Peck draws on letters, diaries, published and unpublished writings, photographs and home movies, tracing a path from Orwell’s childhood in India—the first image: in an Indian nanny’s arms—toward a lifelong inquiry culminating, shortly before his death, in “1984”. The equation “2+2=5” becomes a cipher for the manipulation of reality, the fabrication of truth and the political appropriation of language.As before, Peck adopts the form of the visual essay, making montage the axis. The assemblage of archival footage, media images and staged sequences is not illustrative but dialectical: each image calls forth another in tension rather than continuity, opening critical space. The visual apparatus is reinforced by a soundtrack alternating diegetic fragments with Brechtian interventions, deliberately destabilizing any passive reception. The voice-over functions as countertext rather than commentary, producing semantic dissonances that compel the viewer into an active role of interpretation.Orwell: 2+2=5 radicalizes Peck’s idea of cinema as “counter-history”: not a chronicle, but an epistemological intervention that unmasks manipulation while reaffirming Orwell’s relevance. The result is intellectually rigorous and politically urgent: past dystopias, once imagined, appear less as speculative warnings than as terrifying realities of our present.Teresa Cavina

Producer

Alex Gibney, Raoul Peck, George Chignell, Nick Shumaker

Screenplay

Raoul Peck

Cinematography

Julian Schwanitz, Ben Bloodwell, Stuart Luck, Aera, Maung Nadi, Roman T

Editing

Alexandra Strauss

Sound

Benoît Hillebrant

Cast

Damian Lewis as the voice of George Orwell

Contact

International Sales: Goodfellas, France, feripret@goodfellas.com

More About Film

As in his remarkable I Am Not Your Negro, where Raoul Peck retraced the writings and life of James Baldwin to craft a film-essay on the systemic nature of racism, the Haitian director now immerses himself in the work and biography of George Orwell, producing a documentary as clear as indispensable. With Orwell: 2+2=5 Peck approaches Orwell not as a mere canonical author, but as a critical conscience of the twentieth century and of our time. The film interlaces archives, interviews, reconstructions and inserts, shaping a narrative between biography and collective history.Thanks to full access granted by Orwell’s heirs, Peck draws on letters, diaries, published and unpublished writings, photographs and home movies, tracing a path from Orwell’s childhood in India—the first image: in an Indian nanny’s arms—toward a lifelong inquiry culminating, shortly before his death, in “1984”. The equation “2+2=5” becomes a cipher for the manipulation of reality, the fabrication of truth and the political appropriation of language.As before, Peck adopts the form of the visual essay, making montage the axis. The assemblage of archival footage, media images and staged sequences is not illustrative but dialectical: each image calls forth another in tension rather than continuity, opening critical space. The visual apparatus is reinforced by a soundtrack alternating diegetic fragments with Brechtian interventions, deliberately destabilizing any passive reception. The voice-over functions as countertext rather than commentary, producing semantic dissonances that compel the viewer into an active role of interpretation.Orwell: 2+2=5 radicalizes Peck’s idea of cinema as “counter-history”: not a chronicle, but an epistemological intervention that unmasks manipulation while reaffirming Orwell’s relevance. The result is intellectually rigorous and politically urgent: past dystopias, once imagined, appear less as speculative warnings than as terrifying realities of our present.Teresa Cavina