• Latest
  • Trending
Surveilled Review

Surveilled Review: Ronan Farrow’s Relentless Pursuit of Truth

Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review

Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review: A Dialogue With Tradition

The Chosen Season 5 Review

The Chosen Season 5 Review: The Gravity of a Predestined Hour

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 Review: High Concepts and Diminished Ambition

Jafar Panahi

Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident Wins Sydney Film Prize

2 hours ago
Brad Pitt

“Keep It on the Ground,” Brad Pitt Says of Possible Tom Cruise Team-Up

2 hours ago
Netflix Spain

Netflix Taps Expósito, Morte and Corberó for Next Wave of Spanish Originals

3 hours ago
Robin Wright

Robin Wright Links AI Fears to Pay-Gap Fight at Monte-Carlo Festival

3 hours ago
Al Pacino

Al Pacino Granted Rare Vatican Audience With Pope Leo XIV

3 hours ago
Superman

Gunn Says DCU Deaths Are Final—No Takebacks for Superman Reboot

3 hours ago
Atrabilious

Trailer Unveils Parker’s Star-Packed Noir Atrabilious

3 hours ago
Will Smith

Will Smith Explains Why He Passed on Nolan’s “Inception”

3 hours ago
Andy Serkis

Serkis Debuts Animated Animal Farm After 14-Year Journey

14 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Monday, June 16, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jafar Panahi

    Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident Wins Sydney Film Prize

    Brad Pitt

    “Keep It on the Ground,” Brad Pitt Says of Possible Tom Cruise Team-Up

    Netflix Spain

    Netflix Taps Expósito, Morte and Corberó for Next Wave of Spanish Originals

    Robin Wright

    Robin Wright Links AI Fears to Pay-Gap Fight at Monte-Carlo Festival

    Al Pacino

    Al Pacino Granted Rare Vatican Audience With Pope Leo XIV

    Superman

    Gunn Says DCU Deaths Are Final—No Takebacks for Superman Reboot

    Atrabilious

    Trailer Unveils Parker’s Star-Packed Noir Atrabilious

    Will Smith

    Will Smith Explains Why He Passed on Nolan’s “Inception”

    Andy Serkis

    Serkis Debuts Animated Animal Farm After 14-Year Journey

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Chosen Season 5 Review

    The Chosen Season 5 Review: The Gravity of a Predestined Hour

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 Review: High Concepts and Diminished Ambition

    Rosemead Review

    Rosemead Review: Lucy Liu’s Devastating, Career-Best Performance

    Tatami Review

    Tatami Review: Shot in Stark, Unflinching Black and White

    Diablo Review

    Diablo Review: Adkins Shines in a Tonally Divided Thriller

    Best Wishes to All Review

    Best Wishes to All Review: Beneath the Tranquil Surface

    Bark Review

    Bark Review: Confronting the Stranger Within

    Thug Life Review

    Thug Life Review: Kamal Haasan Shines in a Faltering Saga

    Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything Review

    Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything Review: Architect of the Modern Interview

  • Game Reviews
    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review: A Dialogue With Tradition

    Yakuza 0 Director's Cut Review

    Yakuza 0 Director’s Cut Review: Neon Lights and Brutal Fights

    Trident's Tale Review

    Trident’s Tale Review: Buried Treasure or Fool’s Gold?

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review: A Pixel-Perfect Prison Break

    MindsEye Review

    MindsEye Review: A Beautifully Empty World

    The Alters Review

    The Alters Review: Surviving Your Past

    Dune: Awakening Review

    Dune: Awakening Review: A Brutal, Beautiful World Held Back by Combat

    Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine - Master Crafted Edition Review

    Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine – Master Crafted Edition Review: Old Scars, New Paint

    Fast Fusion Review

    Fast Fusion Review: Speed, Interrupted

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jafar Panahi

    Jafar Panahi’s It Was Just an Accident Wins Sydney Film Prize

    Brad Pitt

    “Keep It on the Ground,” Brad Pitt Says of Possible Tom Cruise Team-Up

    Netflix Spain

    Netflix Taps Expósito, Morte and Corberó for Next Wave of Spanish Originals

    Robin Wright

    Robin Wright Links AI Fears to Pay-Gap Fight at Monte-Carlo Festival

    Al Pacino

    Al Pacino Granted Rare Vatican Audience With Pope Leo XIV

    Superman

    Gunn Says DCU Deaths Are Final—No Takebacks for Superman Reboot

    Atrabilious

    Trailer Unveils Parker’s Star-Packed Noir Atrabilious

    Will Smith

    Will Smith Explains Why He Passed on Nolan’s “Inception”

    Andy Serkis

    Serkis Debuts Animated Animal Farm After 14-Year Journey

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Chosen Season 5 Review

    The Chosen Season 5 Review: The Gravity of a Predestined Hour

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 Review: High Concepts and Diminished Ambition

    Rosemead Review

    Rosemead Review: Lucy Liu’s Devastating, Career-Best Performance

    Tatami Review

    Tatami Review: Shot in Stark, Unflinching Black and White

    Diablo Review

    Diablo Review: Adkins Shines in a Tonally Divided Thriller

    Best Wishes to All Review

    Best Wishes to All Review: Beneath the Tranquil Surface

    Bark Review

    Bark Review: Confronting the Stranger Within

    Thug Life Review

    Thug Life Review: Kamal Haasan Shines in a Faltering Saga

    Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything Review

    Barbara Walters: Tell Me Everything Review: Architect of the Modern Interview

  • Game Reviews
    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review: A Dialogue With Tradition

    Yakuza 0 Director's Cut Review

    Yakuza 0 Director’s Cut Review: Neon Lights and Brutal Fights

    Trident's Tale Review

    Trident’s Tale Review: Buried Treasure or Fool’s Gold?

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review: A Pixel-Perfect Prison Break

    MindsEye Review

    MindsEye Review: A Beautifully Empty World

    The Alters Review

    The Alters Review: Surviving Your Past

    Dune: Awakening Review

    Dune: Awakening Review: A Brutal, Beautiful World Held Back by Combat

    Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine - Master Crafted Edition Review

    Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine – Master Crafted Edition Review: Old Scars, New Paint

    Fast Fusion Review

    Fast Fusion Review: Speed, Interrupted

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Surveilled Review

Mediha Review: Amplifying the Voices of the Forgotten

Threefold Recital Review: A Philosophical Journey Through Karma, Art, and Duality

Home Entertainment Movies

Surveilled Review: Ronan Farrow’s Relentless Pursuit of Truth

A deep dive into the global spyware crisis, Surveilled reveals how surveillance tools like Pegasus are weaponized against activists, journalists, and even democracy itself, raising urgent questions about power, accountability, and the fragility of privacy in a hyper-connected world.

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
5 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

The HBO documentary Surveilled, an hour-long film directed by Matthew O’Neill and Perri Peltz with Ronan Farrow, examines Pegasus, a spyware created by the Israeli NSO Group.

This software breaks into smartphones, extracts data, and turns on cameras or microphones without detection. Governments use it against criminals, and target journalists, dissidents, and citizens who oppose them. The film shows privacy destruction through technology.

People depend on smartphones daily, yet Surveilled makes clear the impact of digital monitoring. Governments claim spyware keeps society safe from crime, but use these systems to dominate and restrict people, including in democratic countries. The documentary reveals stark facts about personal devices becoming weapons that endanger basic freedoms.

Pegasus: The All-Seeing Eye of a Compromised Age

Pegasus, the spyware shown in Surveilled, works as an attack system, made by the Israeli NSO Group. It breaks into smartphones easily, runs without being seen, takes personal data, reads encrypted messages, and uses cameras or microphones—without users knowing.

This spy stays in phones, showing how weak digital privacy has become. The NSO Group sells it to fight terrorism and organized crime, saying it keeps people safe. Yet this same system can both protect and hurt people, making it as risky as what it fights.

The NSO Group’s system creates hard moral choices. It helped catch the drug boss El Chapo, showing it can work for law enforcement. Still, people used it badly, like in the killing of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi. This creates a problem: how can we balance catching criminals with stopping governments from attacking critics and taking away rights? Making things worse, many use “safety” as an excuse, putting privacy at risk.

Pegasus exists in 45 countries, with both strict governments and free ones using it secretly. The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto found proof of attacks on news writers, opposing politicians, and regular people.

Ronan Farrow: Journalism as Spectacle and Substance

Ronan Farrow guides Surveilled as a reporter who writes about misuse of rank and control. After his articles about Harvey Weinstein earned him a Pulitzer Prize and his stories exposed wrong acts by big groups, people saw him as someone who chases facts. His part in Surveilled feels real since spies watched him during his past work. Farrow shows the problem through his own experience.

Surveilled Review

Farrow acts as speaker, researcher, and guide in the film. He speaks calmly yet firmly about spy programs, making hard ideas easy to grasp. Saying things like “a spy in your pocket” stays with viewers – these words feel scary yet true. People watch him closely, and he shows how this affects real people’s lives. Sometimes his fame pulls focus from the main story about spying.

The best parts mix Farrow’s deep research with news skills. He talks to NSO workers near their bosses, meets secret sources who share info, and asks U.S. leaders what they did wrong. His direct style breaks through fake answers from companies and governments.

A Global Web of Intrusion: The Investigative Reach of Surveilled

The story in Surveilled shows a worldwide scheme. For two years on many continents, Ronan Farrow searched for facts in the shiny NSO Group offices in Tel Aviv, through the science rooms of Citizen Lab in Toronto, and in the tense areas of Catalonia. These places tell parts of a story about tech misuse, ruling groups, and lost privacy.

Surveilled Review

Surveilled shows scary facts. Farrow links Pegasus to Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi’s murder, showing how spy tech helps kill people. In Catalonia, the program spied on freedom fighters and law makers who wanted independence, plus their family members faced these state spy methods. Free countries did this too – they talked about law and safety but watched their people with Pegasus. The film shows both strict rulers and free states doing wrong things.

People who spoke up made these facts known. Past NSO workers talked in secret about bad choices the company made. Citizen Lab found proof of Pegasus use. These brave people put themselves at risk to tell what happened. They fought back against hidden groups with strong tech by telling the truth.

The Mechanics of Truth: Style and Substance in Surveilled

Surveilled looks plain, like a TV news story instead of an artistic film. The movie shows talks, research clips, and Farrow speaking. This makes things feel current, but stays stuck in news-style filming. The camera records Farrow meeting hidden sources and speaking with NSO staff near their PR team. This way tells the facts clearly but misses making the story look special or feel deep.

The film stays focused and moves fast. Farrow speaks plainly about hard tech info. The one-hour show packs big info into small bits people can follow. The short time both helps and hurts the film. Quick facts replace drama, and big stories—like how Pegasus helped kill Jamal Khashoggi—pass too fast.

The simple style makes things easy to grasp, but skips making eye-catching scenes or strong feelings. People learn from the film, but might not feel scared enough about what they see.

The Death of Privacy in the Age of Pegasus

Surveilled shows privacy has died. Spy programs like Pegasus scare many people, not just their direct targets. People stay quiet, news writers fear writing, and street protesters stop marching since someone always watches.

Speaking freely—basic to any free country—breaks down when all talks, secret or open, might be heard. Pegasus hurts both the people it spies on and whole groups who become too scared to speak up or fight back.

Free states say they guard people’s rights, yet use spy programs, creating hard law problems. No one knows how to stop hidden tech. No one stops rulers who say they guard people but really control them. Laws move too slow to catch new tech, leaving people stuck with hidden rulers.

Farrow says sadly that real privacy might mean throwing phones away. This shows more than just picking safety or rights – our phones can turn against us at any time. It feels silly now to believe in honest governments, companies, or machines.

A Warning That Demands Reckoning

Surveilled gives no easy answers to its scary findings. The film acts as a red flag—showing how spying breaks down free states and human rights.

The movie points blame at both the spyware Pegasus and the NSO Group, plus the hidden groups letting these spy methods grow unseen. The film asks for people to act and make spy groups show what they do, speaking to a world that stopped caring about lost privacy.

Many things stay unsolved. Spy tech grows too big, basic rights shrink, people’s trust dies. The movie ends by making viewers think: can anyone stay free in a world that makes them trade privacy to join in?

The Review

Surveilled

8 Score

Surveilled shows scary links between tech, control, and secret lives. The film looks simple but tells facts well through Ronan Farrow's strong voice. The movie uncovers how spy programs like Pegasus hurt people worldwide. People see how their rights might break soon. The movie moves fast and skips some feeling, but speaks clear and loud.

PROS

  • Sharp investigative rigor and global scope.
  • Ronan Farrow’s engaging and authoritative narration.
  • Illuminates complex issues with clarity and urgency.
  • Highlights the chilling implications of surveillance for democracy.
  • Strong contributions from whistleblowers and experts like Citizen Lab.

CONS

  • Straightforward, news-like presentation lacks cinematic flair.
  • Limited emotional depth and dramatic tension.
  • Short runtime (only one hour) compresses key moments.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: FeaturedHBO Documentary FilmsMac QuayleMatthew O'NeillPerri PeltzRonan FarrowSurveilled
Previous Post

Mediha Review: Amplifying the Voices of the Forgotten

Next Post

Threefold Recital Review: A Philosophical Journey Through Karma, Art, and Duality

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Art Detectives Review

    Art Detectives Review: The Case of the Brilliant Man and the Underwritten Woman

    50 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Deep Cover Review: A Script for Chaos, Left Unread

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Survivors Season 1 Review: A Town Drowning in Secrets

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Titan: The OceanGate Disaster Review: History Repeats Itself in the Deep

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Call Her Alex Review: Hulu’s Frustrating Look at a Media Titan

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

The Chosen Season 5 Review
TV Shows

The Chosen Season 5 Review: The Gravity of a Predestined Hour

1 hour ago
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3
TV Shows

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 3 Review: High Concepts and Diminished Ambition

2 hours ago
Thug Life Review
Movies

Thug Life Review: Kamal Haasan Shines in a Faltering Saga

1 day ago
The Gilded Age Season 3 Review
TV Shows

The Gilded Age Season 3 Review: The Architecture of Power Crumbles

1 day ago
Revival Review
Entertainment

Revival Review: Wausau’s Walking Dead Offer More Than Brains

2 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version