‘Rendition’ feels like a Lifetime movie
Clumsy thriller flubs opportunity to explore important issue
![]() New Line Cinema Isabella (Reese Witherspoon), desperate to track down her missing husband, goes to former college pal Alan (Peter Sarsgaard) for help in "Rendition." |
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Reese Witherspoon stars as Isabella, the very pregnant wife of Egyptian-American engineer Anwar (Omar Metwally). On his way back from an electronics conference in South Africa, Anwar is detained at the airport in Washington, D.C. and questioned about a car bombing that has recently taken place in North Africa. He claims to know nothing, so the CIA whisks him off to Africa for questioning.
Officials at immigration try to tell Isabella that Anwar was never on the plane, but his credit card records indicate otherwise. She seeks help from old college pal Alan (Peter Sarsgaard), who works for Senator Hawkins (Alan Arkin) and clearly still has issues about losing Isabella’s heart to Anwar. Alan’s search for Anwar runs up against a stone wall erected by CIA chief Corrine Whitman (Meryl Streep, doing that Southern accent that’s movie shorthand for “evil politico”). Their pas de deux at a Washington reception — courteous on the surface, gut-punching between the lines — is the movie’s one highlight.
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There’s lots of playing with narrative — a big twist involves events not happening in the order we expected — and a subplot about Abasi’s daughter and her love affair with an Islamic radical. But “Rendition,” in the end, is a Lifetime movie with pretensions toward being a political thriller. (They could even call it “YOU HAVE MY HUSBAND!” since Witherspoon shrieks that at Streep in a ludicrous scene.)
It’s hard to explain what’s so very wrong about “Rendition” without spoiling too much, but let’s just say that if you were expecting a nuanced discussion of the war on terror, or had even a fleeting thought that everything wouldn’t be put to right by one courageous white American, then forget it.
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