20 whistleblower movies to watch

From “All the President's Men” to “The Report” and more, these movies tell the stories of those who spoke up and out about corruption — often putting themselves in danger along the way.

Whistleblowers
Adam Driver in 'The Report'; Matt Damon in 'The Informant'; Julia Roberts in 'Erin Brockovich'. Photo: Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon; Everett Collection (2)

Movies about whistleblowers are still relevant, but this particular subgenre has a rich, storied tradition. From old-school Best Picture winners like On the Waterfront to crusading star-driven dramas like Erin Brockovich to modern favorites like Dark Waters, the thrill of watching brave individuals risk their lives to stand up for the greater good will never go out of style, and may even inspire us to do the same.

Here are 20 whistleblower-themed films worth exposing for the compelling watches they are — many of which are made all the more powerful by knowing they're based on true events.

01 of 17

On the Waterfront (1954)

ON THE WATERFRONT, Marlon Brando, 1954
Everett Collection

On the Waterfront tells the tale of Terry Malloy (Marlon Brando), a boxer-turned-longshoreman whose guilty conscience slowly turns him against the mob-connected union leader who rules the docks. The Oscar-winning classic also had its roots in a different sort of whistleblowing: At the height of the McCarthy era, Waterfront director Elia Kazan became a pariah in Hollywood for naming former Communists to the House Un-American Activities Committee. This film is often viewed as Kazan's response to his detractors, and the parallels aren't hard to spot.

02 of 17

Serpico (1973)

SERPICO, Al Pacino, 1973
Everett Collection

In between playing a mafia boss in The Godfather and its sequel, Al Pacino took on the titular role based on Frank Serpico, an NYPD officer who became determined to expose the widespread corruption within the force. The film remains regarded as a classic today, anchored by Pacino's typically fierce performance and Sidney Lumet's sterling direction and use of New York City.

03 of 17

All the President's Men (1976)

ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN, Robert Redford, Dustin Hoffman, 1976
Everett Collection

Still the journalism movie all others aspire toward, All the President's Men tracks Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward (Robert Redford) and Carl Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) as their diligent work steadily uncovers the full breadth and depth of the Watergate scandal with the help of an anonymous source, Deep Throat.

04 of 17

Silkwood (1983)

SILKWOOD, Meryl Streep, Kurt Russell, Cher, 1983
Everett Collection

Legendary director Mike Nichols (The Graduate) helmed this drama based on the life of Karen Silkwood (played by Meryl Streep), who died in a mysterious car crash while investigating harmful practices at the nuclear plant where she worked. Kurt Russell and Cher costar as Silkwood's boyfriend and housemate — which, on paper, sounds like the setup for the world's best sitcom. But, in practice, Silkwood is a powerful slow burn, deep-diving into its subject's everyday life and burgeoning crusade.

05 of 17

The Insider (1999)

THE INSIDER, Al Pacino, Russell Crowe, 1999
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Pacino picked up the whistle again, this time alongside Russell Crowe, in The Insider, playing a 60 Minutes producer who pushes to bring Jeffrey Wigand's (Crowe) damning account of the tobacco industry's practices to light.

06 of 17

Erin Brockovich (2000)

ERIN BROCKOVICH, Julia Roberts, 2000
Everett Collection

With Pacific Gas & Electric making headlines again for their role in California's spate of wildfires, it's an apt time to revisit Steven Soderbergh's legal drama (for which he lost the Best Director Oscar...to himself, for Traffic). Erin Brockovich stars Julia Roberts as the title character, who discovers PG&E has contaminated a small town's water supply and masterminds a legal crusade against the company.

07 of 17

The Constant Gardener (2005)

THE CONSTANT GARDENER, Rachel Weisz, Ralph Fiennes, 2005, ©Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collect
Everett Collection

The Constant Gardener stars Ralph Fiennes as a Kenya-based British diplomat who, while investigating the murder of his wife (Rachel Weisz, in an Oscar-winning performance), uncovers the malicious conduct of a pharmaceutical company that she had been investigating. The film burns with the same moral urgency as the John le Carré novel it's based on; as the author noted, "By comparison with the reality, my story was as tame as a holiday postcard."

08 of 17

North Country (2005)

NORTH COUNTRY, Charlize Theron, (center), 2005, (c) Warner Brothers/courtesy Everett Collection
Everett Collection

Before helming Disney's live-action Mulan, Niki Caro directed Charlize Theron and Frances McDormand to Oscar nominations in North Country, which follows mineworker Josey Aimes (Theron) as she spearheads the first class-action sexual harassment lawsuit in U.S. history. Somewhat tepidly received upon release (EW called it "the right movie at the wrong time"), North Country is a necessary watch in the #MeToo era.

09 of 17

Michael Clayton (2007)

MICHAEL CLAYTON, Tilda Swinton, 2007. ©Warner Bros./courtesy Everett Collection
Everett Collection

If you like your whistleblower dramas a little more heightened, Michael Clayton, written and directed by Bourne writer Tony Gilroy, is the movie for you. George Clooney plays the eponymous character, a fixer for a high-profile law firm who falls into a web of intense corporate espionage involving one of the firm's clients. Also featured: Tilda Swinton as the client's ruthless lawyer and some tense sequences that validate the paranoia at the heart of all great whistleblower films.

10 of 17

The Informant! (2009)

THE INFORMANT!, Matt Damon, 2009. Ph: Claudette Barius/©Warner Bros./courtesy Everett Collection
Everett Collection

Almost a decade after Erin Brockovich, Soderbergh delivered a more askew take on the whistleblower tale with The Informant!, written by future The Report writer-director Scott Z. Burns. A game Matt Damon stars as Mark Whitacre, a high-level VP at a massive company who worked with the FBI to expose a price-fixing conspiracy there. The film stands out for its eccentric approach: Soderbergh packed the cast with comedians — Joel McHale, Patton Oswalt, even the Smothers Brothers — and adopted an arch tone that bugged as many critics as it impressed.

11 of 17

The Most Dangerous Man in America (2009) and The Post (2017)

post
Everett Collection; Niko Tavernise/Fox

A few real-life whistleblowers have had their stories told onscreen through both documentary and dramatization. One such example: Daniel Ellsberg, the military analyst who leaked the Pentagon Papers and exposed secret U.S. government activity relating to the Vietnam War. The Oscar-nominated documentary The Most Dangerous Man in America tracks Ellsberg through the lead-up to the publication of the Pentagon Papers, while Steven Spielberg's The Post tells the story of the Washington Post journalists who published them, starring Meryl Streep as publisher Katharine Graham, Tom Hanks as editor Ben Bradlee, and Matthew Rhys as Ellsberg.

12 of 17

Fair Game (2010)

FAIR GAME, from left: Naomi Watts, Sean Penn, 2010. ©Summit Entertainment/Courtesy Everett Collectio
Everett Collection

If you want to relive more Bush administration-era outrages, allow us to recommend Fair Game, based on the 2003 Plame affair. That scandal revolved around the administration's outing of Valerie Plame (played by Naomi Watts) as a CIA operative, ostensibly in retaliation for her diplomat husband's (Sean Penn) criticism of the Iraq War. (He wrote a New York Times op-ed debunking the administration's WMD rationale.) The film shifts between spy thriller and domestic drama to explore, as EW's Owen Gleiberman put it, "What's greater, the price of hiding the truth — or telling it?"

13 of 17

We Steal Secrets (2013) and The Fifth Estate (2013)

wikileaks
Focus World; Frank Connor/Dream Works

Remember when WikiLeaks was better known for whistleblowing than for helping interfere in U.S. elections? Alex Gibney's We Steal Secrets and Benedict Cumberbatch's The Fifth Estate can't help but look outdated now, but both fascinatingly chart WikiLeaks' history and paint vivid portraits of founder Julian Assange.

14 of 17

Citizenfour (2014) and Snowden (2016)

Citizenfour-snowden
Everett Collection (2)

Edward Snowden may be the most significant — and is certainly the most famous — whistleblower of the 2010s, with his revelations about the National Security Agency's surveillance practices reshaping our views on technology, privacy, and intelligence. Laura Poitras' Oscar-winning Citizenfour is an essential document, chronicling the days Snowden spent in Hong Kong making his initial disclosures to Poitras and two other journalists. Oliver Stone's Snowden, with Joseph Gordon-Levitt as the title character, is less essential, but helps illuminate the man himself and boasts a solid performance from Gordon-Levitt.

15 of 17

Official Secrets (2019)

Keira Knightley in 'Official Secrets'
Keira Knightley in 'Official Secrets'. Sundance Institute

Official Secrets dramatizes a lesser-known (at least stateside) but no less vital whistleblower story — that of Katharine Gun (played by Keira Knightley). Gun, a British government employee, leaked a secret memo about an illegal NSA operation to pressure the UN Security Council to sanction the Iraq War. "What's interesting about this film is it's set in 2003...Yet it still feels like we don't have the conclusion of this story," Knightley told EW. "We're still very much living with it."

16 of 17

The Report (2019)

The Report
Atsushi Nishijima/Amazon

The injustices of the War on Terror hang heavily over the movies in 2019. The Report follows Adam Driver as Senate staffer Daniel J. Jones, who led an investigation into the CIA's use of torture in the wake of 9/11. A star-studded cast playing a roster of familiar government figures surround Driver, including Annette Bening as Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Jon Hamm as President Obama's chief of staff.

17 of 17

Dark Waters (2019)

DARK WATERS
Mary Cybulski/Focus Features

Dark Waters shines a spotlight on Robert Bilott (played by Mark Ruffalo), a lawyer who undertook a decades-long battle with DuPont over the company's environmental contamination and cover-up.

"I've gotten to know Rob very well and have a tremendous amount of admiration for him and the work that he's done," Ruffalo said in an interview. "[I want] to help have this information be disseminated out into the world. It's really important. It's been underreported, and it touches all of our lives. It transcends politics and ideologies. It's one place I think where we can meet communally."