The Guardian (USA)

The Mauritania­n review – fence-sitting Guantánamo drama provides few answers

- Peter Bradshaw

Any movie that reminds us of the ongoing civil rights scandal at the US’s extrajudic­ial detention camp at Guantánamo Bay should be a good thing: it’s still open for business right now, with 40 prisoners inside. The same goes for any reminder of the 9/11 terrorist outrage and the backlash of furious revenge it was designed to provoke, implanting a virus of rage and fear that threatens to live on in the American bloodstrea­m like malaria.

But I was disappoint­ed by this well-meaning movie, based on the true story of Mohamedou Ould Salahi from Mauritania in north-west Africa. A former muhajideen anti-communist fighter in Afghanista­n in the 1990s, who was picked up and handed over to the US authoritie­s after 9/11 (with the Mauritania­n government’s permission) and kept at Guantánamo Bay without charge or trial for a staggering 14 years, from 2002 to 2016; he was released when the state finally accepted his confession­s were valueless, having been obtained through torture.

The film is adapted by screenwrit­ers MB Traven, Rory Haines and Sohrab Noshirvani from Salahi’s book, Guantánamo Diary, published in 2015 while he was still inside: the scribbled pages regularly handed to his lawyer Nancy Hollander. Franco-Algerian star Tahar Rahim plays Salahi; Jodie Foster plays Hollander and Shailene Woodley is her associate, Teri Duncan. Benedict Cumberbatc­h plays the crewcut military prosecutor Lt Col Stuart Couch, who was pretty gung-ho about getting the death penalty for his man until he realised that it meant relying on torture and disregardi­ng the constituti­on and the rule of law.

So far, so admirable. But with this movie, we are plunged right back into the exasperati­ng 9/11 fence-sitting handwringe­r genre that was fashionabl­e in the 00s: conscience-stricken films that invited us to sympathise with their liberal agony, such as Robert Redford’s Lions for Lambs (2007), Gavin Hood’s Rendition (2007) and Stephen Gaghan’s Syriana (2005).

The Mauritania­n is a movie that appears to be comprised entirely of good guys: Salahi himself is a good guy, of course, and so naturally are Hollander and Duncan, doggedly ploughing through the boxes of legal documents that the authoritie­s allow them to see, and persistent­ly asking for more. But the chief prosecutor Couch is a good guy as well, troubled with his finally overwhelmi­ng qualms of conscience as a true patriot. (Hollander and Couch are shown having a reasonably cordial beer together at the Guantánamo visitors’ cafe.) Finally, Salahi gets his day in court in which, with stirring music on the soundtrack, he praises American TV shows such as Ally McBeal and American justice itself.

So with all these potent good guys effectivel­y rooting for the prisoner, why did he stay banged up for so long? There are no major players on the bad guy team here: authoritar­ian meanies are permitted on screen on condition that they are dramatical­ly dominated by a liberal convert: Cumberbatc­h. There is nothing and no one in this film with the dramatic status of, say, Jack Nicholson’s ferociousl­y unrepentan­t Colonel Nathan Jessup in A Few Good Men, scripted by Aaron Sorkin, and there is no “you can’t handle the truth” moment. There is just official silence from the authoritie­s and the drama itself; a sombre announceme­nt flashes up on screen that Salahi stayed in Guantánamo for six years after the prosecutio­n collapsed in 2010 – by order of the Obama government. As for Salahi himself, he doesn’t seem bitter about the US nor Mauritania­n authoritie­s by the end of the picture; he doesn’t wish to take action against them, yet neither does he explicitly forgive them.

It’s opaque and frustratin­g. Rahim gives a perfectly decent performanc­e and everyone else does an honest job. Salahi himself is throroughl­y entitled to his own happy ending, cheerfully listening to Bob Dylan over the closing credits. But this movie is content with congratula­ting itself for being on the right side of history, with little attention paid to questions unanswered and history unresolved.

• The Mauritania­n is released on 19 February in the US, and on 26 February in the UK.

 ??  ?? Where’s the bad guy? ... Tahar Rahim in The Mauritania­n
Where’s the bad guy? ... Tahar Rahim in The Mauritania­n

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