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No
Gray Matter Here
Torture
deserves a smarter movie
BY
MOLLY TEMPLETON
RENDITION:
Directed by Gavin Hood. Written by Kelley Sane. Cinematography,
Dion Bebe. Music, Paul Hepker and Mark Kilian. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal,
Reese Witherspoon, Peter Sarsgaard, Alan Arkin, Meryl Streep, Omar
Metwally and Zineb Oukach. New Line Cinema, 2007. R. 120 min. 
While there is nothing horrifically wrong with Rendition,
a solid, well-put-together film which doesn't so much rip its story
from the headlines as pluck it gently from the news, twist it a
touch and set it on its feet, there is nothing spectacularly right
about it either. With its abundance of under-developed characters,
unsatisfying plot threads and reliance on a black/white view of
the world, Rendition is, for the most part, exactly what
a cynic would expect: Too slick, too pretty, too bland to dare say
anything or pose more than the most obvious questions.
And it's a disappointment, too, this blandness,
at least when you consider the potential inherent in a film that
stars Reese Witherspoon, Jake Gyllenhaal and Meryl Streep. But not
one of them gives more than a standard performance: As Isabella
Fields-El-Ibrahimi, Witherspoon has little to do but look concerned
about her missing husband as she strokes her massively pregnant
belly. Gyllenhaal, playing recently promoted CIA analyst Douglas
Freeman, seems even more out of his depth than his character is
meant to. And Streep, well, we know she can do icy like nobody's
business. Here, as steely-hearted government official Corinne Whitman,
she does it with a drawl.
Rendition tries to hold together three or
four strands of plot, including Isabella's search for her husband,
Anwar (Omar Metwally), who never got off his plane from South Africa;
Charlie's (Peter Sarsgaard) brief wrestling match with his conscience
when his boss (Alan Arkin) tells him to drop Isabella's search;
and Fatima's (Zineb Oukach) defiance of her father, Abasi (Yigal
Naor), whom she disobeys out of love for Khalid (Moa Khouas), though
Khalid's occasional disappearances trouble her (and the film; his
subplot feels like an afterthought).
It's not an unreasonable number of storylines for
a movie to hold together, as recent films have shown, but Rendition
fails to create emotional tension between the pieces; instead, one
thing leads logically and simply to another up until a small twist
near the end that lends nothing to the story. Everything goes as
you expect; the good guys are good, responding to their consciences
and their compassion, and the bad guys give the briefest shimmer
of feeling before marching off to do the duties they believe they
must do. It's hard to fault a film for being anti-torture, yet it
seems oversimplified and a little cheap to package an anti-torture
piece in such glossy, depthless wrapping, as if there wasn't a lot
of thought put into the position in the first place. At one point,
driven to action, Douglas asks a colleague if there is any proof
that torturing people leads to useful information, rather than simply
creating more enemies. There is no answer from the man he questions,
which, of course, gives Douglas his answer. But to sympathize with,
to feel boundless horror for a man who we know is innocent
— that's easy. What if you don't know?
By ignoring the ambiguities, the complexities, the
endless questions that surround the use of force and power, Rendition
turns the fate of those spirited away by the government into something
of a fairy tale. Still, though it mostly misses the mark, it's a
game try at bringing an important conversation into the theater,
and you can almost see the filmmakers (chiefly Tsotsi director
Gavin Hood and screenwriter Kelley Sane) hoping for in-depth post-film
debate. Though for some their film will engender nothing but further
cynicism, let's hope — in the spirit of optimism — that
it spurs a few meaningful discussions.
Rendition ends Thursday, Nov. 1, at VRC Stadium
15 and Cinemark.
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