The little-known story of a teenage scientist who passed US nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union is the subject of a new documentary that premiered at the Venice Film Festival this week. "A Compassionate Spy", by celebrated US filmmaker Steve James, hopes to reignite debate about nuclear weapons at a time of rising geopolitical tensions. "Climate change and other issues have taken our attention away from that threat but it's always been there and it's coming back," James told AFP in Venice.
Although the FBI long suspected Hall of espionage, they were never able to find conclusive evidence. But the tension for him and his family was almost unbearable, especially when two other spies, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, were executed in the US in 1953. The film makes clear the vastly different attitudes towards Russians in 1944, when the Soviet Union was a wartime ally, seen as heroically standing up to Nazism. Hall later said he would not have done it had he known about the crimes of Joseph Stalin at the time. "Maybe he was willfully naïve," said James. "But we have to remember, he was so young."