Review: ‘Words of War’ (2025), starring Maxine Peake, Ciarán Hinds, Jason Isaacs, Ian Hart, Harry Lawtey, Naomi Battrick and Ellie Bamber

May 7, 2025

by Carla Hay

Maxine Peake (pictured at left) in “Words of War” (Photo by Damir Sagolj/Rolling Pictures)

“Words of War” (2025)

Directed by James Strong

Some language in Russian and Chechen with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Russia, from 1999 to 2006, the dramatic film “Words of War” (based on true events) features a predominantly white group of people (with some Middle Eastern people) representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya becomes an outspoken critic of Russian leader Vladimir Putin and Russia’s invasion of Chechnya before, during and after she spends time in war zones and in hostage situations. 

Culture Audience: “Words of War” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and biopics about journalists who have criticisms of their own governments.

Ciarán Hinds in “Words of War” (Photo by Damir Sagolj/Rolling Pictures)

Clunky but intriguing, “Words of War” is mostly watchable because of the cast members’ performances. This often-trite drama (about slain journalist Anna Politkovskaya, an outspoken critic of Valdimir Putin) should’ve had better editing and sharper dialogue. It’s not a horrible movie, but there’s nothing outstanding about it either.

Directed by James Strong and written by Eric Poppen, “Words of War” (formerly titled “Mother Russia”) takes place in Russia from 1999 to 2006. It’s a biopic that was not approved by Politkovskaya’s family. However, “Words of War” plays it so safe and has such a fawning portrayal of Politkovskaya as a fearless hero (with no realistic personality flaws), the movie comes across as an officially sanctioned biopic.

Even when she’s shown near death in a hospital after being poisoned, her recovery is quickly skipped over, and she’s back on the job as a reporter again as if this poisoning never really happened. There’s no mention of realistic and lingering health issues she would’ve gotten as a result of this severe poisoning. For the purposes of this review, the real people are referred to by their last names, while the characters in the movie by their first names.

At age 48, Politkovskaya was murdered by a gunman in the elevator of her Moscow apartment building on October 7, 2006, which was the 54th birthday of Russian president Putin. Even if people see “Words of War” before knowing that Politkovskaya was murdered, the movie keeps foreshadowing that things will not end well for her because of her scathing criticisms of Putin in her work. Because of the abrupt and sometime off-putting way that “Words of War” is edited, the movie comes across as a “check list” of certain events in her life before quickly moving on to the next event.

“Words of War” begins in 2004, with a scene of Anna Politkovskaya (played by Maxine Peake) in a hospital for what is later revealed to be poisoning from drinking tea that a flight attendant served her on an airplane. Anna is a reporter for Novaya Gazeta, an independent Russian newspaper. She had been on the plane to report on the September 2004 hostage crisis at a school in Beslan. Instead of being able to complete the trip, she ended up unconscious in the intensive-care unit (ICU) of this hospital.

Anna’s two adult children—son Ilya (played by Harry Lawtey) and daughter Vera (played by Naomi Battrick)—are by her side at the hospital. Anna is also being attended to by a nurse named Mila (played by Elee Nova), when Anna’s boss Dmitry Muratov (played by Ciarán Hinds), the founder/editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta, arrives at the hospital. Dmitry tells the unnamed ICU nurse receptionist (played by Jana Herbsta) that he’s there to visit Anna.

Dmitry is told that only family members are allowed to visit patients. And by the way, she mentions, there’s no record of someone with Anna’s name being admitted to the hospital. Dmitry immediately knows what that means: Anna is being targeted to get “disappeared” by the Russian government.

And so what does he do? He’s able to immediately find the room where Anna is and tells Ilya, Vera and Mila that they all have to smuggle Anna out of the hospital immediately. They wheel an unconscious Anna, who’s using an IV drip, out on a gurney and onto a waiting private plane, with no security guards in sight to stop them. How convenient.

For someone who’s supposedly being surveilled by a government and was poisoned under suspicious circumstances, Anna sure can be smuggled easily out of this hospital. It’s a very “only in a movie” moment that doesn’t ring true. A better movie would have made this hospital escape have more realistic obstacles.

People who saw the Oscar-winning 2022 documentary “Navalny” (about Russian writer/activist/politician Alexei Navalny, another outspoken critic of Putin) will remember that after Navalny was poisoned and in a hospital in 2020, his hospital room was guarded like a fortress by Russian soldiers. His wife Yulia Navalnaya had to fight to get through the human barricade to see him. In 2024, Navalny died of a fall in prison in under mysterious circumstances.

After Anna is successfully smuggled out of the hospital, “Words of War” abruptly jumps back in time to 1999, the year that Putin became prime minister of Russia. Anna is appalled by the Russian government’s invasion of Chechnya. And she isn’t afraid write about it and to go in the war zone to do to on-the-scene reporting.

Anna’s husband Alexander “Sasha” Politkovsky (played by Jason Isaacs), who is a broadcast journalist and TV talk show host, doesn’t want her to go this war zone. But nothing can stop Anna once she has her mind made up. Sasha makes Anna promise to always notify her family about her locations when she’s in Chechnya. Ilya is more upset than Vera about Anna going to Chechnya.

While in Chechnya, Anna meets a local journalist named Anzor (played by Fady Elsayed), who gives reality checks to wide-eyed Anna about how dangerous things can be. He somewhat reluctantly agrees to her request to let her tag along with him. Anzor also acts as an language interpreter when Anna as to interview some local people, including a woman named Fatima (played by Lujza Richter), who says she doesn’t trust Russian journalists, but Anna quickly gains Fatima’s trust anyway.

Yes, some explosions go off near Anna, but the movie doesn’t get too graphic or terrifying in showing her war zone experiences. Most people watching this movie will know or probably guess that if Anna is going to die, it’s not going to be in a combat zone. Her time in this war zone comes and goes quickly (less than 20 minutes) before she’s back in Moscow in another abrupt scene transition where’s back to a domestic life with Sasha, who’s feeling restless because he’s now unemployed and a little bored.

“Words of War” could have used title cards to show when a scene takes place in a different year because the timeline will be confusing to some viewers. Anna’s time in the war zone is supposed to be haunting her, but it’s treated in a somewhat superficial manner. In 2001, she attends a prestigious media awards ceremony with Sasha, who is supportive and enthusiastic when Anna gets a global award for human rights journalism. But the award feels like an empty accomplishment to Anna, who would rather be reporting from the war zone in Chechnya instead of reporting from an office desk in Moscow.

Anna’s confrontations with the story’s villains have good acting, but the dialogue is at times cringeworthy. There’s a scene in Chechnya where Anna is alone in a dilapidated room with a Russian combat leader named Major Lapin (played Steffan Rhodri), where she has been attempting to interview him. Major Lapin is hostile to her and doesn’t want to be interviewed.

Anna ends up scolding Major Lapin for all the death and destruction that the Russians are causing in Chechnya. As Anna gets up to leave the room, Major Lapin’s responds by coldly snarling at her, “I can slit your throat and let you bleed out like a pig.” This is the type of corny dialogue that lowers the quality of the movie.

A character that was fabricated for the movie is a shady government agent named Egorov (played by Ian Hart), who approaches Anna at a cafe when she’s back in Moscow. He starts off with a friendly conversation that turns into a lecture/warning that her life is in danger if she continues to insult the Russian government, namely Putin. Egorov pops up again from time to time to let Anna know that she is under surveillance.

The most suspenseful part of “War of Words” is when about 170 hostages are taken during a peformance at Moscow’s Dubrovka Theater in 2002. The hostage takers are Chechen fighters who are demanding Chechnya’s freedom from Russia. Because of her recent reporting from Chechnya, Anna is enlisted to be a hostage negotiator.

The movie has some subplots that kind of fizzle out, such as Anzor being captured in Chechnya and Anna feeling guilty about it. Another subplot shows Anna being stalked by a young man named Ivan (played by Billy Hinchcliff), who isn’t the type of person most viewers might think he is. These subplots are thrown into the story, like extraneous ingredients in a stew.

Peake depicts Anna with a steely confidence and somewhat of a messianic complex because Anna thinks it would be noble to die for a journalistic cause, even if her death would bring immeasurable pain to her family and other loved ones. Isaacs is perfectly fine as conflicted Sasha, who is torn between being supportive of his wife’s career and expressing his misgivings about her occupational hazards. The scenes of Peake and Isaacs together as Anna and Sasha are believable in their portrayals of this longtime married couple.

Hinds has a standout scene where Dmitry essentially shouts at Anna for acting as if she owns the newspaper. It’s a battle of egos where Anna wants to assert her independence but Dmitry has to remind her who’s the boss at this job. It’s one of the more realistic scenes in the movie because it’s one of the few times where Anna’s judgment is questioned by someone who shares her political beliefs.

“Words of War” is certainly a well-intentioned movie about a Russian journalist who could be seen as a martyr by many people. But it’s a little disconcerting that this movie, which has a cast of mostly Western Europeans, didn’t bother to have Russian accents for the Russian characters. Every character who’s Russian in the movie sounds British. If you can get past the incorrect accents and the sometimes sluggish pacing of “Words of War,” the movie is worth watching for a fascinating story about a journalist who lived on the edges of of risk-taking reporting—even if those edges look a little too smoothed-over for this movie.

Rolling Pictures released “Words of War” in select U.S. cinemas on May 2, 2025.

Review: ‘Dance First,’ starring Gabriel Byrne, Fionn O’Shea, Sandrine Bonnaire, Léonie Lojkine, Bronagh Gallagher, Maxine Peake and Aidan Gillen

August 24, 2024

by Carla Hay

Gabriel Byrne in “Dance First” (Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures)

“Dance First”

Directed by James Marsh

Some language in French and Irish with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Ireland, France and briefly in Norway, from 1911 to 1989, the dramatic film “Dance First” (a biopic of writer Samuel Beckett) features an all-white group of people representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Samuel Beckett leaves his native Ireland to live in France as a writer, and he becomes entangled in the French Resistance against Nazis and personal problems in his love relationships.

Culture Audience: “Dance First” will appeal mainly to people who are fans of Beckett and the movie’s headliners, but the movie leaves out a lot of information about the work that made Beckett famous.

Fionn O’Shea in “Dance First” (Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures)

“Dance First” (a biopic of writer Samuel Beckett) crafts his life story like a stylish but uneven patchwork quilt. The cast members’ performances can keep viewers interested when some scenes drag with monotony. The movie mostly ignores his creative talent.

Directed by James Marsh and written by Neil Forsyth, “Dance First” gets its title from this quote attributed to Beckett: “Dance first, think later.” Beckett (who was born in Foxrock, Ireland, in 1906, and died in Paris in 1989) was best known for his plays “Waiting for Godot” and “Endgame,” but he also wrote novels, poems and short stories. Beckett also worked as a theater director.

“Dance First” (which was filmed in black and white) had its world premiere at the 2023 San Sebastian International Film Festival. In the production notes for “Dance First,” director Marsh has this description of the movie: “It’s an unusual biography of Samuel Beckett, unusual because it reviews his life through the lens of his mistakes.” The movie’s synopsis reads, in part: “Literary genius Samuel Beckett lived a life of many parts: Parisian bon vivant, WWII Resistance fighter, Nobel Prize-winning playwright, philandering husband, recluse. But despite all the adulation that came his, way he was a man acutely aware of his own failings.”

The problem is that by focusing mostly on Beckett’s failings and mistakes, “Dance First” comes across as an incomplete picture that ultimately does not do justice to Beckett as a well-rounded and complex person. The movie goes out its way to sideline meaningful insights to Beckett as an artist, which is the aspect of his life that has the most public interest. Instead, “Dance First” is a series of scenes showing how his relationships mostly made him feel sad or restless.

“Dance First” is divided into five chapters, with all but one named after a pivotal person in his life. For the purposes of this review, the real people will be referred to by their last names. The characters in “Dance First” will be referred to by their first names.

“Dance First” opens with a scene taking place in 1969, when 63-year-old Samuel (played by Gabriel Byrne) is in Oslo, Norway, to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. (“Dance First” was actually filmed in Belgium.) Sitting next to Samuel at the ceremony is his wife Suzanne Dechevaux-Dumesnil (played by Sandrine Bonnaire), a French pianist who married him in 1961. As Samuel is being praised on stage, he looks disgusted and mutters to Suzanne, “What a catastrophe.”

Samuel angrily strides on stage to accept the prize, which he grabs as if it’s a worthless trinket. He then quickly walks out of the venue, climbs up on a water tower, and finds himself in a desert-like area where he sees a man (also played by Byrne), who looks just like him. That’s because the other man is also Samuel, who is seen talking to himself in interlude scenes for the rest of the movie, which shows him from the ages of 5 to the last year of his life at age 83.

It’s always a risk when a movie wants to be a serious dramatic biopic but then introduces fantasy elements that have a main character talking to a physical embodiment of himself. This risk doesn’t quite pay off in “Dance First,” because it comes across as a gimmicky distraction. The two Samuels often argue with each other, which is the movie’s way of showing that Samuel has inner conflicts.

The “real” Samuel is stubborn and cranky in old age, while “alter ego” Samuel is somehow wise enough to know what the future holds and gives the “real” Samuel advice that the “real” Samuel doesn’t necessarily want to hear. The entire movie has an off-kilter tone of making the “real” Samuel look back on his life, with the “alter ego” Samuel trying to make him feel shame and regret for his mistakes.

The “real” Samuel tells “alter ego” Samuel that he doesn’t deserve this Nobel Prize, so he wants to give the prize money to charity. The “real” Samuel then starts to have memories of people from his past, as a way to determine whom he should contact to possibly donate the money. It’s supposed to give Samuel’s reminiscing an extra layer of gravitas, but it just further muddles the story.

“Dance First” then takes a detour into a chapter called “Mother,” because Samuel says “it all starts with mother.” This chapter of the movie begins by showing Samuel’s childhood at age 5 (played by Cillian Hollywood) and age 10 (played by Caleb Johnston-Miller), when he was raised by two very different parents. Samuel’s mother May Beckett (played by Lisa Dwyer Hogg) is domineering and overly critical. (In real life, Samuel Beckett’s mother’s first name was Maria, and she worked as a nurse.) May constantly corrects Samuel on how he pronounces and writes words.

Samuel’s father William Beckett (played by Barry O’Connor), who is barely in the movie, is kind and loving. In real life, William Beckett was a quantity surveyor. There are some brief scenes of William doing things such as walking with boyhood Samuel in a field, but the character of William remains a mostly passive presence who does nothing to stop May’s psychological torment of Samuel. In real life, Samuel Beckett had a brother named Frank, who was four years older that Samuel, but Frank is erased from this movie’s story.

Predictably, the negative parental experiences have more of an impact on Samuel. As a teenager and young adult, Samuel (played by Fionn O’Shea) and May continue to clash with each other. By now, Samuel has become an aspiring writer, but his mother seems to relish in humiliating him with cruel critiques. In one of the movie’s more dramatic scenes, May thinks that something Samuel wrote is an unflattering depiction of her.

“You’re demonizing me!” May yells at him. Samuel replies, “You only imagine it is you because the whole world is you.” It’s implied by not said aloud that May is a narcissist who might have a mental illness or personality disorder. Samuel’s love/hate relationship with his mother and his need for her approval will play out in different ways with other women in his life, particularly the woman would become his wife.

In other scene, teenage Samuel asks May if she read something that she wrote. She replies with disapproval that what he wrote was too sexually provocative. “There will always be a call for titillation,” May says dismissively.

When he asks her again, “Did you read it?” May snarls with contempt: “What a waste!” May hurling this insult at Samuel is a memory that is shown more than once in the movie at different points in Samuel’s life. There are a few flashbacks of May shouting “What a waste!,” as a way to show how Samuel has long-lasting emotional scars from being verbally abused by his mother.

When young adult Samuel announces to May that he wants to move to Paris to become a writer and will never go back to Ireland, May makes this bigoted and bizarre remark about continental Europe: “The continent is populated almost entirely by homosexuals.” Samuel says that May is flawed if she thinks she can control him. “I gave you everything,” May says indignantly. Samuel replies, “I hope for your sake it’s not true.”

This is the type of dialogue that you might expect from a second-rate soap opera, not a biopic about a “literary genius.” But it goes on like this for the rest of “Dance First.” Much credit should be given to the talented cast members who do the best they can with the often-cringeworthy lines that they have to utter.

The movie’s chapter “Lucia” shows Samuel as a college student in Paris. Samuel meets a young woman about the same age named Lucia Joyce (played by Gráinne Good), a singer/dancer who happens to be the daughter of acclaimed author James Joyce (played by Aiden Gillen), who is one of Samuel’s idols. There’s a scene where Samuel verbally gushes over James like a fanboy. However, James seems somewhat jaded and unimpressed by this young admirer, who ends up working with James as an assistant. Samuel and Lucia have a doomed romance that is also given the soap opera treatment in this movie.

The movie’s chapter “Alfy” is about the period of Samuel’s life when he joined the French Resistance against the Nazis. The chapter’s namesake is Alfred Péron (played by Robert Aramayo), a French Jew who befriends Samuel. In real life, Péron was Beckett’s French teacher when Beckett was a student at Trinity College in Dublin. It’s in this chapter that Samuel meets young adult Suzanne (played by Léonie Lojkine), who becomes his most trusted person to give him advice and evaluations for his writing.

The chapter titled “Suzanne” shows the troubled marriage of Samuel and Suzanne, who have a better relationship as artists than as spouses. Samuel is chronically unfaithful to Suzanne, but another woman unexpectedly captures his heart when they begin a relationship in the late 1950s: Barbara Bray (played by Maxine Peake), a British widow who worked as a script editor for the BBC. Barbara is warm and understanding as an obvious counterpoint to Suzanne, who can be cold and critical.

Samuel and Suzanne were dating each other but not yet married when Samuel got involved with Barbara. Samuel ultimately choses to marry Suzanne. The movie shows Samuel and Suzanne eloping in a very simple civil ceremony. Barbara takes the rejection in stride and continues to be involved with Samuel, although the movie makes it look like their relationship became platonic in their elderly years.

According to “Dance First,” Samuel married Suzanne because he felt that Suzanne was better than Barbara for giving brutally honest reviews of his work. A Freudian psychologist would have a field day in an analysis of how the dynamics between Samuel and Suzanne are a repeat of the dynamics between Samuel and his mother, although Suzanne was not as vicious as Samuel’s mother.

The chapter titled “Le Fin” (which means “The End” in French) shows the last years of Samuel’s life. By the time the movie reaches this point, there are major milestones and artistic achievements that the real Beckett had that are never seen in the movie. Byrne and Bonnaire give fine performances as a married couple who have learned to live with a very flawed marriage. However, the artistic bond that holds the marriage together is woefully underrepresented in “Dance First.”

It’s frustratingly counterproductive to make a movie that revolves largely around a marriage where the spouses’ only enduring respect for each other is as artists, but then the movie never bothers to show meaningful scenes of them creating this art that is so important to them. There are some bland scenes of Samuel using a typewriter, or Suzanne reading snippets of Samuel’s work back to him and telling him what she thinks. Even though the movie’s black and white cinematography looks great, “Dance First” is not the movie to see if you want to get fascinating behind-the-scenes stories about how the real Beckett created his most influential work. “Dance First” is told in chapters, but it’s like reading a biography where many of the chapters that should be there were deliberately removed.

Magnolia Pictures released “Dance First” in select U.S. cinemas on August 9, 2024. The movie was released on digital and VOD on August 16, 2024.

Copyright 2017-2025 Culture Mix
CULTURE MIX