The audience is unduly flattered, never once forced to question its own complicity in allowing this foul and almost always counter-productive flouting of international law to flourish.
Rendition (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:12
Fresh:6
Rotten:6
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: The impressive cast cannot rescue Rendition, which explores complex issues in woefully simplified terms.
Theatrical Release:19-10-2007
Synopsis: Reese Witherspoon and Jake Gyllenhaal star in this nail-biting political thriller from director Gavin Hood (TSOTSI). Showing the price and behind-the-scenes drama of post 9/11 anti-terrorist... Reese Witherspoon and Jake Gyllenhaal star in this nail-biting political thriller from director Gavin Hood (TSOTSI). Showing the price and behind-the-scenes drama of post 9/11 anti-terrorist security policies, the film focuses on the controversial U.S. practice of transporting suspected terrorists to locations outside the U.S. for intense interrogation and, as the film suggests, torture. Here, it is Egyptian-born Anwar El-Ibrahimi (Omar Metwally), an engineer and family man, who becomes a CIA target. On his way home to Chicago from business in South Africa, Anwar disappears at the Washington, D.C., airport. The records show he boarded the plane, but he never returns to his pregnant wife, Isabella (Witherspoon), and small son. As Anwar is taken to an undisclosed location for questioning, several other plotlines are introduced. After his partner is killed by a suicide bomber, Douglas Freeman (Gyllenhaal), a young and relatively inexperienced CIA analyst, must step in to observe the brutal torture and interrogation of Anwar at the hands of the brutish Abasi Fawal (Igal Naor), whose own daughter has run away with the brother of a potential terrorist. RENDITION tackles serious issues with an all-star cast that also includes a typically flawless Meryl Streep as a steely government official responsible for approving Anwar's kidnapping, and Peter Sarsgaard as old friend of Isabella who uses his political position to help her. RENDITION never delves too deeply into any one character, focusing instead on the important ways in which multiple storylines intersect and the personal stakes that each character has in the case. Clever editing and solid writing contribute to the film's success by encouraging the audience to view events from multiple points of view and by never becoming preachy or one-sided. [More]
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Reese Witherspoon, Alan Arkin, Meryl Streep
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Reese Witherspoon, Alan Arkin, Meryl Streep, Peter Sarsgaard, Omar Metwally, J.K. Simmons
Director: Gavin Hood
Director: Gavin Hood
Screenwriter: Kelley Sane
Producer: Steve Golin, Marcus Viscidi
Composer: Paul Hepker, Mark Kilian
Studio: New Line Cinema
Reviews for Rendition
This movie is composed in the increasingly familiar international hectic-mosaic style, with a note of justified paranoia.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/film_reviews/article2678874.ece
A watchable but rigged and strangely forgettable drama that loses its nerve in the way its real-life political quarry rarely does.
It's a weapon of mass distraction, designed to stop you realising this is about as challenging as a GCSE in General Studies.
A worthwhile but somewhat underwhelming effort, perhaps too level-headed for its own good.
Disappointingly dull given the explosive subject matter, this at least attempts to get a message into the mainstream. An extra star for effort rather than execution.
What the film documents is that we have lost faith in due process and the rule of law, and have forfeited the moral high ground.
Its clumsy efforts are toward an honest and difficult goal, which is to use the resources of mainstream movie-making to get viewers thinking about a moral crisis that many of us would prefer to ignore.
There is a crying need to publicly explore the U.S. government's policy of "extraordinary renditions"...But Rendition tackles the concern in a heavy-handed thriller with simplistic characters and manipulative story lines.
Even Witherspoon, normally the most spirited of performers who can inject even limited characters and blah scripts with her own spark, can do little but mope around and search for different ways to look worried.
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