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WARNER

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Gavin Hood
Cast:
Jake Gyllenhaal, Reese Witherspoon, Peter Sarsgaard
Screenplay: Synopsis:
When a terrorist bombing in North Africa kills 19, an Egyptian chemical engineer on his way from South Africa to the US disappears and his wife asks a senator for help.

Box Office:
Budget:
$28 million.
Opening Weekend:
$1,670,000 on 2250 screens.
Domestic Gross:
$9,736,045.

MPAA:
Rated R.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audio:
English Dolby 5.1
Spanish Dolby 2.0
Portuguese Dolby 5.1
Subtitles:
English
Spanish
Portuguese
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Portuguese

Runtime: 122 min.
Price: $19.99
Release Date: 11/18/2025

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Director Gavin Hood
• “Outlawed” Featurette
• “Intersections” Featurette
• Deleted/Alternate Scenes with Optional Commentary
• Trailer


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

EQUIPMENT
-LG OLED65C6P 65-Inch 4K Ultra HD Smart OLED TV
-Marantz SR7010 9.2 Channel Full 4K Ultra HD AV Surround Receiver
-Panasonic DMP-BDT220P Blu-Ray Player
-Chane A2.4 Speakers
-SVS SB12-NSD 12" 400-watt Sealed Box Subwoofer


RELATED REVIEWS


Rendition (2025 Reissue) [Blu-Ray] (2007)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (January 5, 2026)

While the presence of multiple Oscar-winning actors doesn’t ensure the success of a flick, it should at least ensure that the picture in question doesn’t slip into obscurity. When the performers in question were as famous as Reese Witherspoon, Meryl Streep and Alan Arkin, it seemed even more difficult for the movie to vanish.

Add a then-rising star like Jake Gyllenhaal to the equation and it appeared impossible for such a film to stay out of the public consciousness. And yet 2007’s Rendition somehow managed to escape much notice.

It opened in October, pulled in a miserable $9 million and went bye-bye. I’m not sure it deserved such a fate, but I also can’t claim that it emerged as a neglected gem.

As he flies home to Chicago from a conference in South Africa, authorities surreptitiously apprehend Anwar El-Ibrahimi (Omar Metwally) as a possible participant in a terrorist plot. As part of this, they eliminate any indications that El-Ibrahimi took his flight, a factor that leaves his wife Isabella (Witherspoon) to feel he disappeared without a trace.

Although interrogator Lee Mayer (JK Simmons) thinks El-Ibrahimi isn’t involved, his CIA boss Corrine Whitman (Streep) remains interested. This means El-Ibrahimi will suffer through more severe questioning methods in a secret location, all while Isabella tries to find him.

In the meantime, inexperienced CIA operative Douglas Freeman (Gyllenhaal) becomes involved in the interrogation. We also spend time with a young local couple (Moa Khouas and Zineb Oukach) as we discover their connection to the situation.

Here’s one thing filmmakers of the era should’ve known to be true: mass audiences largely avoided stories about the Iraq War or terrorism. That doesn’t mean these flicks shouldn’t be made, of course, but especially in the late 2007s, US moviegoers may have felt they got enough of this stuff on the evening news and didn’t need reminders when they went to the cinema.

Rendition obviously wasn’t the film to change that trend, and frankly, it didn’t deserve to be the movie to alter the standard equation. Much of the problem comes from its Babel-lite feel. Like that 2006 flick, Rendition takes on a handful of interrelated stories and melds them into one by the end.

While that motif worked well in the consistently deft and intriguing Babel, here it feels much less successful. The different tales fail to really coalesce.

We see the connections but the movie never links them in a satisfying manner. Instead, the film feels like a bunch of different stories that all compete for our attention but never grab it.

Honestly, none of the stories ever manage to become especially involving. Rendition has the potential to tell some interesting tales, but it spends too little time on any of them to prosper.

All the characters and themes are too underdeveloped to draw in the viewer. This means they fail to create real power behind the events most of the time.

While Rendition boasts an excellent cast, don’t expect a lot from them here. Most of the actors seem to be on cruise control throughout the film, as their performances rarely demonstrate much power or depth.

I don’t really blame the actors, as I think the flaws mostly remain with the inadequacies of the script. Nonetheless, the performers don’t do much to elevate the tepid material.

With one exception, that is. Metwally does an excellent job as the possible terrorist El-Ibrahami.

He gets a physically difficult part and deftly conveys all the different emotions experienced by his character. It’s the one turn in the film that really stands out as powerful.

But he can’t make Rendition into something more than a glorified editorial. Much of the film feels like an extended screed against excessive interrogation techniques.

Hey, I’m all for that, as I don’t agree with the manner in which the Bush administration – or any others - embrace of torture. However, just because the flick and I land on the same political page doesn’t mean I like the film.

It’s the ham-handed way in which Rendition explores its themes that causes problems. The film could’ve become an intriguing debate about the techniques if it’d been less obvious and less stuck on one side.

Unfortunately, it leaves little question as to its agenda. It doesn’t allow much room for the audience to come to their own conclusions.

Despite these criticisms, I can’t call Rendition a bad film. Even with its flaws, it musters some power from its basic situations.

Rendition manages to remain watchable at all times. It just never works any better than that, and it comes as a disappointment.


The Disc Grades: Picture B/ Audio B/ Bonus B

Rendition appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. I thought the disc provided a consistently satisfactory transfer.

Only a few minor glitches affected sharpness. At times, some wide shots displayed modest softness, but most of the film showed nice clarity and accuracy.

Shimmering and jaggies seemed to be absent, but I witnessed some light edge haloes through the flick. At least it came without source flaws.

With the palette of Rendition, expect an emphasis on teal/blue and amber/orange. The hues were consistently satisfying within those parameters.

Blacks seemed dark and tight, and shadows displayed good clarity, as the low-light shots offered nice delineation. Despite some softness and haloes, this nonetheless felt like a good presentation.

I felt the same about the involving DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of Rendition. The outdoor scenes in Africa created the best settings.

Some of the good material came from the gunfire and explosions. Even the basic street environment proved lively and encompassing, though.

Most of the movie stayed with general atmosphere, and those elements were also good. Music displayed nice stereo imaging and the surrounds bolstered the track well.

Audio quality pleased. A few louder lines showed some edginess, but dialogue was usually crisp and concise.

Music displayed good range and vivacity, while effects were clear and accurate. Bass response proved satisfying during more prominent moments. I liked this consistently positive soundtrack.

How did the Blu-ray compare to the 2008 DVD? The BD’s lossless audio showed added clarity, though both exhibited similar soundscapes.

The Blu-ray offered the usual format-related upgrades. This meant the BD looked tighter, brighter and more vivid than the DVD.

A few extras round out this set, and we get an audio commentary with director Gavin Hood. He provides a running, screen-specific chat. Hood chats about locations and geographical decisions, story and script issues, cast, characters and performances, visual design, research and real-life influences, and a few other production decisions.

Hood provides a consistently chatty and involving commentary. He keeps things moving at a nice pace and offers a broad view of the production.

Really, I can’t find much to dislike about this solid little discussion. Hood covers the appropriate bases in a positive manner.

A documentary called ”Outlawed” goes for 27 minutes, 42 seconds. This piece looks at the cases some folks detained and interrogated in secret during recent years.

We hear from subject Khaled El-Masri, CIA Rendition Program Chief Architect Michael Scheuer, and the relatives of a torture victim. Like Rendition itself, “Outlawed” wears its politics on its sleeve.

Unlike the film, though, this show boasts the power behind its factual nature. It gives us a powerful look at some of the atrocities conducted under lawless interrogation programs.

Intersections: The Making of Rendition runs 30 minutes, eight seconds and features notes from Hood, producers Steve Golin and Marcus Viscidi, director of photography Dion Beebe, extras casting director Salaheddine Benchegra, location managers Driss Gaidi and Christian McWilliams, Moroccan first AD Nourredine Aberdine, first AD Peter Kohn, picture vehicle coordinator Steve Lamonby, and actors Reese Witherspoon, Peter Sarsgaard, Omar Metwally, Zineb Oukach, Moa Khouas, Jake Gyllenhaal and Meryl Streep.

The show looks at shooting in various locations and logistical concerns, cinematography, some story and character thoughts, casting extras, Hood’s approach to the material, and a few additional issues on the set.

While a bit disjointed, “Intersections” works mostly due to a lot of good glimpses at the set. We find many nice “fly on the wall” shots that let us take a look behind the scenes. These elements flesh out the occasional filmmaker comments and make this an interesting program.

Five Deleted/Alternate Scenes last a total of 18 minutes, 28 seconds. We find “Phone Call Subplot” (6:58), “Madrasa” (1:14), “Fake Escape” (6:16), “Extended Prison Escape” (1:21) and “Alternate Ending” (2:39).

“Call” is probably the most interesting of the bunch as it explores Freeman’s suspicions about his lover, but those scenes wouldn’t have added anything notable to the film.

“Fake” also has some decent elements, though it also would’ve slowed down the movie without much merit. The other clips are fairly forgettable, as even the “Alternate Ending” doesn’t bring anything useful to the table.

We can watch these with or without commentary from Hood. The director continues to offer good insights about the film. He provides some thoughts about the scenes and lets us know why he cut them in this engaging discussion.

We finish with the theatrical trailer for Rendition.

If it focused more on characters and plot and less on political commentary, Rendition might’ve become more potent. As it stands, the movie has some moments but tends to veer into territory that makes it more like an editorial than a real story. The Blu-ray provides very good picture and audio along with a mix of satisfying supplements. I can’t complain about this fine release, but the film itself doesn’t prosper enough for my recommendation.

Note that this 2025 Blu-ray reissues the movie’s prior release in 2013. The 2025 BD simply reproduces the same disc from 12 years earlier.

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