Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief

For those who have read Lawrence Wright’s 2013 book—or the 2011 New Yorker piece that inspired it—Going Clear probably won’t contain many revelations. (I’ve only read the New Yorker story.) A methodical deconstruction of the Church of Scientology, Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney’s documentary will tell you what you may already know about the religion founded by prolific science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard: how it indoctrinates new members, how it cultivates celebrity practitioners and how it intimidates those who speak out against the Church.
But if the film’s value as an exposé is limited, Going Clear is sterling as an official record of condemnation. Subtitled Scientology and the Prison of Belief—Wright’s book ran with the slightly more pointed Scientology, Hollywood, & the Prison of Belief—the film is about the Church’s inner workings and its aggressive theological system, which draws from alien mythology, celebrity culture, proactive legal action and “disconnecting” from those who don’t share the same religious views. But Going Clear’s more arresting elements aren’t the supposed salacious bits, because who cares if John Travolta remains a faithful acolyte because, as some have speculated, he’s gay? Instead, what’s so fascinating about the film is Gibney’s interest in how people blind themselves to logic in order to find some sort of reason in their lives. In this way, Going Clear isn’t that far removed from the director’s previous documentaries like Client 9, Mea Maxima Culpa or The Armstrong Lie, which chronicled cults of denial and their consequences.
For his new film, Gibney talks with eight former Scientologists, the most high-profile being Paul Haggis, who won two Oscars behind Crash. It was Haggis’s announcement that he was leaving the Church in 2009 that led to the original New Yorker piece, and in Going Clear he still seems bewildered by his 30-year association with Scientology. The documentary acutely captures the disbelief and shame on the faces of interview subjects who used to be Scientologists. Bright, accomplished people, they all got sucked into the Church. Years later, they haven’t yet found the words to articulate exactly what they were thinking.
Gibney allows Haggis, as well as former Scientology spokesmen and members who attained the highest social position in the Church, to tell their stories as straightforwardly as they can, wisely staying out of the way of its subjects. A religion consumed by controversies—not the least of which is that, despite being a nonprofit unobligated to pay taxes, the Church has a war chest of over $1 billion—Scientology is an easy target for snide putdowns, especially ever since A-list follower Tom Cruise began acting more erratically at the time he began publicly espousing the religion’s benefits. But rather than going for cheap sensationalism, the movie is clinical in its dissection, outlining former members’ grievances and relying on sturdy reporting to investigate the Church’s policies. Just as damning is the group’s own video materials, which include recruitment ads and organizational conferences that have the unsettling fervor of a cult rally. Gibney’s filmmaking style has often tended toward the sober, but Going Clear is especially stripped-down. One imagines that, considering how litigious the Church can be, he wanted to be as clear as possible in his evidence, confronting its leaders (and the public) not with smugness or condescension, but cold, hard testimonials.