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ENTERTAINMENT / Movies
Clooney on thrill ride in "Michael Clayton"
(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-09-04 17:12
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George Clooney poses as he arrives for the screening of his film 'Michael
Clayton'
at the 33nd American film festival of Deauville September 2,
2007.[Reuters]
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For the past seven years, screenwriter Tony Gilroy meticulously has
constructed the "Bourne" trilogy, the superb series that sees amnesia
victim Matt Damon dashing through increasingly thrilling episodes to
discover his identity is basically a bad guy.
In "Michael Clayton," Gilroy's directing debut, which he also wrote, he
reduces his formula to a single film: The eponymous Michael Clayton
hurries -- dashes would be too strong a word -- through increasingly
dangerous episodes to learn what he probably already knows -- that by
doing the dirty work of pond scum he is little more than a bad guy
himself.
As with the "Bourne" films, Gilroy has a knack for creating strong
characters and situations that resonate with tension. It may be formula,
but the guy is a solid chemist, as he crafts excellent set-ups and
payoffs. He has mastered those "ah-hah" moments when everything locks
into place. With Oscar-anointed George Clooney heading a cast of actors
who love to roll up their sleeves to dig into their roles, "Clayton"
should perform well above average for Warner Bros.
Maybe all large corporate law firms have guys like Michael. He calls
himself a "janitor." He is a lawyer, but his "niche" -- as the Manhattan
firm's co-founder Marty Bach (Sydney Pollack) so delicately puts it -- is
to clean up messes by the firm's motley clients.
While driving back from a cleaning job in upstate New York, Michael
unaccountably stops on a lonely road to observe a trio of horses. (This
unaccountably is one of several plot holes.) Suddenly, his car blows up.
Someone has tried to kill him!
Backtrack four days. Near the conclusion of a six-year class-action suit
against an agrochemical client, the firm's top litigator, Arthur Edens
(Tom Wilkinson), who is on the road and about to pull off a pretrial
settlement, suffers a movie attorney meltdown. You know, the kind
real-life lawyers never have. Yet here, like Al Pacino in " . . . And
Justice for All," Arthur discovers that his client is guilty as hell and
wants to make amends. A manic-depressive and off his meds, he is
switching sides. He is also behaving strangely -- he performs a
striptease during a deposition.
Michael rushes to the Midwest to rescue mad Arthur from lockup. Arthur
slips from his custody and gets back to Manhattan, where he holes up in
his loft and makes surreptitious phone calls to a female plaintive.
Meanwhile, Michael's own life is in free fall. A serious gambling addict,
he has decided to bet instead on a restaurant venture, which his
alcoholic brother has run into the ground. He owes $75,000 to some
apparent bad guys and makes a devil's bargain to turn the Arthur
situation around for a bailout by the firm.
The agrochemical company's chief counsel Karen Crowder (Tilda Swinton),
so anxious and overwhelmed by her knowledge of the firm's culpability
and, by implication, her own shortcomings, panics. She hires shady
characters to take care of loose cannon Arthur. After this much more
noxious type of cleaning job, the shady characters can't help noticing
Michael snooping around to learn the truth behind his friend's demise.
Thus, the maladroit car bomb.
All of this cloak-and-dagger melodrama is designed to make Michael
question what kind of man he has become in the firm's "niche." "What are
you?" Arthur asks. "You know exactly what you are," spits his cop brother
in another scene.
A question you might ask yourself: Why a car bomb? Isn't that rather
clumsy and attention-seeking in the midst of a delicate legal settlement?
And why on earth do the hoods stake out the sealed loft of the deceased?
Funnily enough, you ask these questions only after the credits roll.
Until then, you are genuinely caught up in the thriller. Gilroy proves a
decent director of his own literary inventions. He trusts his actors, and
they return the favor with solid characterizations down even to small
roles.
A clutch of major directors who signed on to produce -- Pollack, Steven
Soderbergh and Anthony Minghella -- make sure Gilroy is surrounded by
pros: Cinematographer Robert Elswit keeps things crisp and immaculate.
Designer Kevin Thompson makes every set and location an eye-grabber.
James Newton Howard never intrudes with his score but keeps the tension
subtly building. And Gilroy's own editor-brother John has stitched nicely
together the often-complex scenes.
Cast:
Michael Clayton: George Clooney
Arthur Edens: Tom Wilkinson
Karen Crowder: Tilda Swinton
Marty Bach: Sydney Pollack
Barry Grissom: Michael O'Keefe
Don Jefferies: Ken Howard
Screenwriter-director: Tony Gilroy; Producers: Sydney Pollack, Jennifer
Fox, Steve Samuels, Kerry Orent; Executive producers: Steven Soderbergh,
George Clooney, James Hold, Anthony Minghella; Director of photography:
Robert Elswit; Production designer: Kevin Thompson; Music: James Newton
Howard; Costume designer: Sarah Edwards; Editor: John Gilroy.
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