Waking up in hospital after being poisoned on a plane on the way to Beslan in the North Caucasus in an attempt to help solve a school hostage crisis, Anna Politkovskaya, played by Maxine Peake, learns from a young colleague that Garry Kasparov had called her the conscience of the nation on TV. “Garry Kasparov should stick to playing chess,” a disgruntled Politkovskaya says, in what is perhaps the warmest, funniest moment of Words of War. She is at her most real not when she risks her life in almost open defiance of the Russian authorities, but when she grumbles cutely, watching her name become a legend against her will.
It’s what James Strong’s film, based on a script by Eric Poppen, does best. The film starts with Politkovskaya going to Chechnya for the first time and describing the war from the perspective of ordinary Chechens. We then see her investigating the crimes carried out by the Russian military, her husband’s dismissal from a prestigious TV job, her children’s pleas for her to stop, the 2002 Moscow theatre hostage crisis, her poisoning on a plane on the way to Beslan, threats from Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB), her dancing with her newspaper’s editor-in-chief, and future Nobel Prize winner, Dmitry Muratov, in Gorky Park, and, ultimately, her murder.