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Theatre

Review: Man in the Middle

Revealed - a flawed yet profound Wikileaks drama

January 20, 2012 11:29
Lookalike: Darren Weller as Julian Assange in the uneven Man in the Middle

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

1 min read

If writer Ron Elisha wanted to clarify the dizzying events surrounding WikiLeaks and explore the case for and against its founder, Julian Assange, well, he hasn't.

Elisha's take on how and why Assange embarrassed governments the world over by publishing diplomatic correspondence is part sober examination of the facts, part satire and a lot of stuff in-between that could be either.

Lucy Skilbeck's slick production is set against high-tech video projections that mix images of the real Assange and a silver-haired Darren Weller who charismatically plays the maverick leaker of classified information. There are times when it is hard to tell which is which.

But the other kind of mix on offer here, serious drama and light satire, rarely makes good bedfellows. This is especially the case when the funny stuff has the tone and humour of A-level agitprop. There is, for instance, a scene in which President Obama is confronted by David Cameron for calling the Prime Minister a "lightweight". Through clenched teeth, the pair trade insults. But if Elisha wrote the piece to rub salt into Cameron's wounded pride, he failed, partly because the scene has no whiff of truth about it, partly because it is not funny, but mainly because Cameron comes across as Obama's equal, and what is the point of satire if it increases the standing of its target?