Movies and Music
 Location:  Home:: DVD Downloads :: Drama :: Rendition  
SubCategories
Drama
Sports
Information
Home Theater Forum
Returns / Refunds
Shipping Policies
Contact Us
Shack Shopping
Main Electronics Store

Movies and Music

Our Movies and Music Store offers Online Shopping for a huge selection of DVD, HD-DVD, Blu-ray, CD Music, Video On Demand, DVD Downloads, MP3 Downloads and the Kindle Store. One of the largest movie and music stores on the Internet. We hope you enjoy shopping at the Shack!

Rendition

Rendition
Director: Gavin Hood
Actors: Jake Gyllenhaal, Reese Witherspoon, Alan Arkin, Peter Sarsgaard, And Meryl Streep
Studio: New Line Cinema
Category: Movie


This item is no longer available

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 71 reviews
Sales Rank: 1515

Genre: Drama
Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: Video On Demand
Running Time: 123 Minutes

ASIN: B0014BC3C2

Release Date: August 29, 2008

Synopsis:

Reese Witherspoon, Jake Gyllenhaal, Meryl Streep, Peter Sarsgaard and Alan Arkin star in Rendition, a thriller from director Gavin Hood (Tsotsi). Witherspoon stars as the American wife of an Egyptian-born chemical engineer who disappears on a flight from South Africa to Washington. The woman desperately tries to track her husband down, while a CIA analyst (Gyllenhaal) at a secret detention facility outside the U.S. is forced to question his assignment as he becomes party to the man?s unorthodox interrogation.

Similar Items:

  • Michael Clayton
  • In the Valley of Elah
  • The Brave One
  • We Own the Night
  • Charlie Wilson's War

Customer Reviews:   Read 66 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A study in unreasonable torture   September 25, 2008
Dennis W. Wong
I like films that question the methods our present administration is involved, and this film does that. Well acted by all, including a caustic Senator enacted very well by Meryl Streep. The film raises the question of how far can we go in the detaining of a person we suspect to be a terrorist and the methods of what constitues "torture". I think the only people who would object to this film would be the conservative right.


5 out of 5 stars A serious film about a serious topic that will make you cringe   September 19, 2008
Linda Linguvic (New York City)
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

This 2007 film is scary. That's because the theme is about the practice of interrogating suspected terrorists in a foreign country where laws against torture do not apply. This practice is called rendition and this film makes it real. It's hard to watch.

The film opens in an American middle class suburb. Reese Witherspoon is playing with her small son when they get a phone call from her husband, Omar Metwally, an Egyptian citizen who has lived in America for 20 years. He tells his wife and son he is on the way home from a business trip and they plan on meeting him at the airport. All seems well.

When he gets off the plane, however, he is detained at the airport and questioned. He is a chemical engineer and the questioners are asking questions about a terrorist bomb plot. He denies everything. He seems clean but Meryl Streep, playing a high powered Washington decision maker, orders him to be put into rendition and he is whisked away to an unnamed middle eastern country and his name erased from the plane's passenger log while his wife and son wait patiently at the airport for a husband and father who has disappeared.

The scene now shifts to an unnamed middle eastern country where Yagal Noor, an Israeli actor of Jewish Iraqi descent, is cast in the role of the interrogator. Jake Gyllenhaal is cast as an American diplomat, who has just lost a co-worker in a suicide bombing, and has been promoted to assist Yagal Noor with the questioning. It is awful. I am cringing now just writing about it as scenes of waterboarding and electric shock torture are shown in detail. There is also a subplot about the interrogator's daughter and a suicide bomber which expands the story.

In the meantime Reese Witherspoon is trying desperately to find her husband. She seeks out an old boyfriend, played by Peter Sarsgaard who works for a senator, played by Alan Arkin. Even when they confront Meryl Streep, there is a blank wall of silence. Jake Gyllenhaal, however, is beginning to have a change of heart as the torturing goes on.

This is a serious film about a serious topic. It will make you cringe and it will also make you think. I give it a high recommendation but it is not recommended for the faint of heart.



5 out of 5 stars Outstanding   September 14, 2008
Mark Johnson (San Diego, CA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Outstanding presentation of a dark turn in American policy. "For every man you torture, you make a thousand enemies."


4 out of 5 stars Good, gripping movie   August 8, 2008
Dakar (Littleton, CO)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This was definitely a typical Hollywood portrayal of torture and rendition that I'm sure has gone on. I'm also sure that when authorities are out looking for suspects and leads, they undoubtedly come upon some that are false. I don't think they s/b tortured, but they shouldn't be given rights as US citizens either. I think this movie portrays the exception - a person who's been in the US for 20 years. What should be done? In this case he s/h/b brought in for questioning and detained. then released and watched. For others that have been caught like bin Ladens driver with missiles in the car, they should be imprisoned like he was.


1 out of 5 stars Typical mindless liberal nonsense.   July 26, 2008
Dustin J. Hayden
1 out of 15 found this review helpful

Typical left wing "Hate America first" moive.
It is all our fault terrorists hate us.
There were not terrorists before Bush etc...

Save you money and get the same BS from the kook liberal blogs.






every avenue  jake gyllenhaal  kevin atwood  torture  waterboarding