Rendition: Timely and intelligent political thriller.

March 31, 2008
Rendition : Timely and intelligent political thriller,
 
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.
 
5.0 out of 5 stars Timely and intelligent political thriller, November 5, 2007
By  Karen Franklin "Forensic Psychologist" (El Cerrito, CA, USA)  
 

This movie has it all: Superb direction (by the masterful Gavin Hood of "Crash" fame); a great cast (Meryl Streep, Reese Witherspoon, Jake Gyllenhaal, Omar Metwally); a riveting and harrowing plot that keeps you on the edge of your seat; even an interesting twist at the end (which I won’t give away) that had us all discussing the movie for an hour afterwards.

And if all of that isn’t enough, this is an extremely timely topic. Our government’s participation in torturing people at secret prisons around the world is something that all American citizens should be discussing and debating. Unfortunately, this engaging thriller is not getting the audience it deserves. The fact that "Saw IV," a warped glorification of brutality, has earned four times as much at the box office as Rendition suggests that for many Americans, out of sight is out of mind and escapism is the name of the game.

 

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August Rush: Music is Harmonic Connection between all living beings — The Wizard

August Rush Rated pg : Music is Harmonic Connection between all living beings — The Wizard
 
5.0 out of 5 stars "Music is Harmonic Connection between all living beings — The Wizard", November 25, 2007
BY R. Kyle (Knoxville, TN)
 

Some people hear the rhythm in a step, the strident beauty of a police siren, the whip of a powerline in the wind. Evan Taylor (Freddie Highmore) doesn’t get a decent night’s sleep in the orphanage because of it. His fellow inmates call him freak because he believes both his parents are living and they’ll come for him–if only he call out with the music that connects them.

As he says, "I believe in music the way some people believe in fairy tales." So, Evan decides after eleven years and some days to escape the orphanage and go find the music–and his parents.

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New Amsterdam - not earth-shatteringly great, but still. .

New Amsterdam : not earth-shatteringly great, but still. . .,

A dramatic series about a young police detective who is actually many hundreds of years old after being brought back to life by a Manhattan Native American chief in the seventeenth century. After spending many lifetimes in New York City, he now solves crimes while trying to find his true love, who can restore his mortality.

 
By Gabriela Perez "Oy! So many books. . . ."
 
There are things I don’t like about this show. I can see that already, and I’ve only viewed two episodes. For example, I am a bit irked by how knowing the main character is. He seems almost psychic, but then–he has the advantage of wisdom gained over decades and decades of living. When I keep that in mind, I can ignore how know-it-all he sounds at first listen. I do like that lead character, though. The actor who plays him (whose name I won’t destroy by mucking up the spelling here) does a good job of walking that line between humor and sarcasm, and he’s good with emotion, too. There’s one scene in the pilot where his heart gives out on him, and the expressions crossing his face were just excellently done.

The premise is a neat one, too. I like the whole idea of him searching for his soul mate, and I like the fact that he’s clearly been really searching for her and that he hasn’t been a user and abuser in his search. He’s pretty liberal in his approach to humanity, and I like that as well.

The photography is nicely done as well, as are all the scenes showing New York shifting and changing from John Amsterdam’s early life to the current landscape.


In Treatment: Incredible Serious. Downright Captivatingly Real.

Seasons of In Treatment

HBO premieres the first 15 episodes of In Treatment, a new half-hour drama series starring Gabriel Byrne, and adapted from an enormously popular Israeli series. Set within the intimate confines of individual psychotherapy sessions with five sets of patients, the series centers around a therapist who exhibits an insightful, confident demeanor when treating his patients, but displays a crippling insecurity while counseled by his own therapist.

5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible Serious. Downright Captivatingly Real., March 20, 2008
 
By John Kuczmarski (Chicago, IL)
 
The palette this series uses to paint emotive, empathic, and richly textured profiles of real problems with people has an alluring and self-therapeutic effect. This sounds cheesy, but after a few episodes you grow and feel a kinship with the characters.

I don’t know how to describe how amazingly real this series is. As someone’s not only studied therapy, couseling and psychology academically, but who has also been "in treatment" for over 100 hours, this is the closest thing to real thing. Byrne is exceptional. Wise, smooth, suave, composed, compassionate, and real. His supporting cast (the patients) are equally captivating.

 


Michael Clayton: The Bad and the Beautiful

Michael Clayton Rated r  : The Bad and the Beautiful
 
Michael Clayton
Michael Clayton, a former prosecutor, takes care of Kenner, Bach & Ledeen’s “dirty work.” The firm’s top litigator sabotages a case and the firm sends Clayton to tackle this disaster.
 
5.0 out of 5 stars The Bad and the Beautiful, October 12, 2007
By MICHAEL ACUNA (Southern California United States)
 

Tony Gilroy has already proven that he can weave/write a great story via his writing for the "Bourne" franchise. And the striking thing about "Michael Clayton" is how Gilroy has written ironic, conflicted, complicated characters that are at once "good" (and in the world that Gilroy has created here…this is in itself a term that is up for interpretation) yet are often bad as in unethical, mean, misanthropic.

These characters can and do betray themselves and others: There’s no one to truly love or hate, from Sydney Pollack’s quietly devious law firm CEO, to Tom Wilkinson’s holy madman of an ace courtroom defense attorney, to Tilda Swinton as a tricky senior partner in nice suits that peel off to reveal sweaty armpits and a gift for rationalization.

Even our hero, Michael Clayton as portrayed by George Clooney is a loser: a 12 year veteran at his law firm who is utilized as a bag man, a fixer usually dispatched to do what amounts to private eye work.: cleaning up the firm’s client messes.

Clayton is a failure both professionally and personally: a failure as a father, brother, husband and Clooney strikes just the right notes here as Clayton struggles, fights to regain his dignity both as an officer of the court and more importantly as a father and a human being.

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