Gavin Hood’s Patriot Act

The notion of art as an imitation of life is certainly bolstered by the
wave of documentaries and politically-infused dramas and even action
flicks making their way to theaters this year
. Many are the product of
an anxious world climate in general and a four-years-and-counting war
and foreign occupation with no end in sight in particular. The latest
of these films is director Gavin Hood’s Rendition. Cross-cutting between continents, the movie tells the story of Isabella El-Ibrahimi (Reese Witherspoon),
the American wife of an Egyptian-born, domestically educated chemical
engineer named Anwar El-Ibrahimi (Omar Metwally) who disappears on a
flight from South Africa to Washington D.C.. Plying an ex-boyfriend (Peter Sarsgaard),
now the senior staffer of a senator, for help, Isabella desperately
tries to track her husband down, while a young CIA analyst (Jake Gyllenhaal) at a secret detention facility outside the United States is forced to
question his assignment as he becomes party to some unorthodox
interrogation techniques. The South African-born Hood came to acclaim
with
the Oscar-winning Tsotsi,
about a week in the life of a young thug who eventually tries to set
right his errant ways. While the filmmaker admits to having a
longstanding interest in matters political, he says he didn’t have a
strong knowledge about the particular interstices of U.S. detention and
intelligence-gathering
prior to tackling this project.

“The script came across my desk and I started reading,” Hood recalls during a recent interview. “I read Rendition
on the cover and it could have been Beethoven’s Ninth. I dunno, maybe
it’s a rendition of a song?
But I started reading and I just found
that I was captivated,” he continues. “I kept turning the pages. I
wanted to know what happened next and I thought that [screenwriter
Kelley Sane] had drawn some incredible, and incredibly diverse,
characters that were all emotionally rooted and real.” With this
initial fascination came a lot of questions. But for Hood, who grew up
in a country without a constitution and where, in the 1980s, people
were detained without trial, it was almost as if he was dealing with
the makings of a South African political thriller
. “When I was a young
law student, we looked at the American Constitution as a document that
we felt our country desperately needed,” Hood explains. “And to see
chipped away that great document — and the principles of the Geneva
Convention, which America was largely behind writing after the horrors
of the Second World War — was quite a shock.”

“Now that I have American kids, albeit very recently, I feel even more
strongly about the subject matter,” he adds. “I believe in the
founding principals of this nation and I felt that this film would
perhaps contribute to a discussion that I feel is important. Principals
should not be abandoned without serious discussion
, and patriotic
Americans should stand up for what America stands for.” For the full feature piece, from FilmStew, click here.