The film is packed with clips from film adaptations of 1984, including Michael Anderson’s black and white version from 1956, and Michael Radford’s, released in 1984, documentaries, like Robert Kane Pappas’s 2003 warning Orwell Rolls in His Grave, and news footage from World War II through Gaza. In sum, it makes a persuasive point that things are only getting worse.
Orwell: 2+2=5 is loosely structured around Orwell’s time on the Isle of Jura in Scotland, where he wrote what would be his last novel, 1984, while his health was deteriorating from tuberculosis. He went to Jura in 1946 and was dead by 1950. But this is no Wikipedia page or college lecture. There are no talking heads and no one explaining, “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.”
Instead, it’s a loose assembly of biography, reflection and key moments of political awakening, with actor Damian Lewis narrating Orwell’s words with a poetic gravitas, interspersed with a collage of images, words and archival footage. Anything from David Lean’s Oliver Twist and Sydney Pollack Out of Africa to Lauren Greenfield’s Generation Wealth is on the table, and nothing is there carelessly. Alexei Aigui’s powerful score adds a melancholy weight to sequences showing wartime destruction past and present along with the political phrases used to describe them: A “strategic bombing” in Berlin in 1945, “peacekeeping operations” in Mariupol in 2022, “clearance operation” in Myanmar in 2017.