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Michael Clayton (2007)
Director: Tony Gilroy
Synopsis
Michael Clayton is an in-house ‘fixer’ at one of the largest corporate law firms in New York, doing dirty work at the behest of his boss. Though exhausted and unhappy, his divorce, a failed business venture and mounting debt have left Clayton tied to the firm. At U/North, meanwhile, the career of litigator Karen Crowder rests on the multi-million dollar settlement of a class action suit that Clayton's firm is leading to a seemingly successful conclusion. But when their brilliant and guilt-ridden attorney Arthur Edens sabotages the case, Clayton faces the biggest challenge of his career and his life.
Movie review
From Time Out London
There are shades of ‘Erin Brockovich’ in screenwriter Tony Gilroy’s directorial debut: a gorgeous, lovable A-lister (here George Clooney) gets caught up in skulduggery surrounding a massive class action lawsuit brought against a heartless megacorporation. Nor is Gilroy’s technique a million miles from Soderbergh’s, what with its tricksy chronology, fragmented, impressionistic montage and canny use of, er, George Clooney.
Clayton is a stalwart at a prestigious New York legal firm, a go-to man for awkward situations requiring a delicate touch; his private life, meanwhile, is a jumble of divorce, debt and family strife. He’s charged with damage limitation when his close colleague, company legend Arthur (Tom Wilkinson), cracks up six years into his defence of multinational company UNorth’s dodgy weedkiller record. With his boss (Sydney Pollack) distracted by a potential buy-out of the firm and UNorth’s highly strung general counsel (Tilda Swinton) on a hair-trigger, the personal welfare of Arthur and Michael is not a top priority.
This story is not without its formulaic, even clichéd, elements – the fixer who can finesse away everyone’s problems but his own, the corporate lackey redeemed by taking a stand – but its structure is unpredictable and stimulating. Through a cool, muted palette and excellent cast, Gilroy establishes a strong sense of the corporate milieu and its discontents, paying attention to the frail, messy human bodies beneath the power suits. The film also offers a handful of striking coups, including a terrifyingly efficient murder, a bristling climactic confrontation and a final, sombre shot of Clooney in a cab that makes him seem less like Cary Grant in ‘North by Northwest’ than Bob Hoskins in ‘The Long Good Friday’.
Author: Ben Walters
Time Out London Issue 1936: September 26-October 2 2007
User reviews of this film
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- M Parker said...
- Posted on Oct 02 2007 14:08 This film is heavy handed and slow moving. The direction is v weak at times and the story line - cliched. You will be disappointed because it promises more than it delivers.
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- Sarah Ward said...
- Posted on Oct 01 2007 15:13 Do NOT go and see this film! Definitely the worst film I have ever seen. I've never been to see a film at the cinema where people have walked out half way through and so many people fell asleep including myself and by boyfriend. There is no real story line, George Clooney is dull and it is FAR too long. Genuinely don't have one good thing to say about it. When the film eventually finished I heard the people sitting in the row in front of me saying that they felt like asking for their money back. I think this sums up how you will feel is you spend your hard earnt cash going to see this film....robbed!!!
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- Jemima said...
- Posted on Sep 29 2007 23:37 A strong story that kept me engrossed throughout and worth the ticket to see it before everyone will be talking about it. Probably a good oscar nomination for Clooney - go see
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Cast & crew
Director: Tony Gilroy
Producer: Sydney Pollack, Jennifer Fox, Steven Samuels, Kerry Orent
Cast: George Clooney, Tom Wilkinson, Tilda Swinton, Sydney Pollack full cast
Rated: 15
Duration: 119 mins
UK Release: Sep 28 2007
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