Rendition Review
By Chris Cabin
CIA watchdog Corrine Whitman (Streep) sets up the titular protocol when evidence is uncovered against Chicago family man and chemical engineer Anwar El-Ibrahimi (Omar Metwally), Egyptian by birth. Whitman suspects that El-Ibrahimi had a hand in a recent bombing of an unnamed North African tea house; an attempt on the life of North African security head Fawal (Igal Naor). Fawal heads the "interrogation" with CIA analyst Douglas Freeman (Jake Gyllenhaal) there as counsel while they electrocute, drown, beat, and strangle Anwar to give up information on the attack.
Soon enough, Anwar's pregnant wife Isabella (Reese Witherspoon) begins stirring the pot with her ex-flame and Senator's aide Alan Smith (Sarsgaard). As a happy coincidence, it's at the same time that Freeman's conscience kicks in after he realizes that Anwar truly knows nothing about the attacks and gets ready to hightail it out of the prison with Anwar. Meanwhile, Fawal's daughter spends her nights kissing an extremist prepping for an attack to avenge his brother, the victim of one of the security chief's prior interrogations.
Seductively shot by the great Dion Beebe (Collateral, Miami Vice), Hood has moved from very personal terrain (Tsotsi) to a globe-spanning human rights drama. The transition, at times daunting and inexcusably partisan, shows Hood as an assured director in the thick of multiple narratives. The filmmaker tightly winds each scene and brings out the strengths in Kelley Sane's skin-deep script. There's a solid scaffolding in Sane's pages, but the script has no ear for the emotional maelstrom swirling among these characters, giving the actors very little to work with. The performances vary from passable to steadfast, but Naor, brooding with the weight of tradition and responsibility, steals the film.
The film's title comes from the term "extraordinary rendition," a buzzword dreamt up during the Clinton administration for when the government secretly extradites terrorist suspects to other countries to weasel around civil liberties. Whereas Stephen Gaghan's Syriana found fault with liberals and conservatives alike, Rendition blindly believes in one ending that will rightly crown those who stand against torture and persecution as the righteous. Towards the later half, the film goes so far as to presuppose that if people were to merely read about the torture and mistreatment of an innocent that would change things for the better. In many ways, Rendition can be best described as a fantasy.
The devil wears Prada.
Facts and Figures
Year: 2007
Run time: 122 mins
In Theaters: Friday 19th October 2007
Box Office USA: $9.7M
Box Office Worldwide: $24.7M
Budget: $27.5M
Distributed by: New Line Cinema
Production compaines: Anonymous Content, Level 1 Entertainment
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5
Rotten Tomatoes: 47%
Fresh: 72 Rotten: 81
IMDB: 6.8 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Gavin Hood
Producer: Steve Golin, Marcus Viscidi
Screenwriter: Kelley Sane
Starring: Omar Metwally as Anwar El-Ibrahimi, Reese Witherspoon as Isabella Fields El-Ibrahimi, Jake Gyllenhaal as Douglas Freeman, Moa Khouas as Khalid, Zineb Oukach as Fatima Fawal, Yigal Naor as Abasi Fawal, Laila Mrabti as Lina Fawal, David Fabrizio as William Dixon, J.K. Simmons as Lee Mayer, Meryl Streep as Corrine Whitman, Peter Sarsgaard as Alan Smith, Alan Arkin as Senator Hawkins, Najib Oudghiri as Omar Adnan
Also starring: Steve Golin, Marcus Viscidi