In Good Company Movie Review
In Good Company Review

"In Good Company" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul WeitzProducer : Chris Weitz,Paul Weitz,Andrew Miano,Kerry Kohansky,Rodney M. Liber
Screenwiter : Paul Weitz
Starring : Dennis Quaid,Topher Grace,Marg Helgenberger,Scarlet Johannson,Selma Blair,David Paymer,Philip Baker Hall
It’s one of those nightmare scenarios of which feel-good stories are made: Dan
Foreman (Dennis Quaid), middle-aged family man and top sales guy at a big,
Sports Illustrated-like magazine, gets thrown for a loop when his company is
bought and he gets demoted to make room for Carter Duryea (Topher Grace), some
whiz kid half his age. Oh, and his daughter wants to transfer from SUNY to the
much more expensive NYU. Oh, and that night when he gets home, his wife tells
him she’s pregnant. At first it seems that In Good Company is not going to go
for the feel-good resolution in which lessons are learned, lives are improved,
and everybody fades into a happy sunset… but then it does, and it’s hard not to
feel cheated.
Whatever else may be said, this film is the work of consummate professionals,
and that doesn’t mean it’s soulless but competent hackwork. Writer/director
Paul Weitz showed with his wonderful, glowing adaptation of Nick Hornby’s About
a Boy that he could tell heartwarming stories that didn’t insult the mind and
could inject just enough acidity into a romance to keep a movie from flopping
into a messy, Love, Actually-style mess. The directing and writing here are
superbly crisp, and one really couldn’t ask for better performances, both from
the stars and supporting cast.
As the two men butting heads at the film’s center, Quaid and Grace are
effortless in their roles, with Quaid somehow making Dan, that most overdone
stereotype – the embattled father and wage-earner who longs for his daughter to
stay a little girl forever – a uniquely affecting creation, while Grace locates
the lonely, desperate-for-attention soul in Carter’s impatient, 26-year-old
corporate ladder climber and makes you practically yearn for his happiness. A
nice twist in the story backdrops Carter’s ascension at the office over Dan
with a role reversal at home: Dan has a loving family, friends, and a new baby
on the way, while Carter’s wife of seven months (Selma Blair, in a too-short
and wickedly hilarious cameo) has just divorced him, so he’s taken to inviting
himself over to Dan’s house simply to feel some human warmth. (One could have
made a whole farce simply out of showing this man dealing with the humiliation
of working for this baby-faced tyro, who insists on saying “psyched” and
“awesome.”) Completing this triangle of fine performers is the always valuable
Scarlett Johansson, playing Dan’s daughter Alex, who completes her father’s
symbolic emasculation by starting an affair with Carter. Sure, most of what we
see in their relationship involves walking along picturesque Greenwich Village
streets while mellow pop tunes play, but it’s a welcome respite from the mildly
dull corporate skullduggery going on back at the office.
As adept as he is with his actors, though, Weitz’s script isn’t always up to
the task, especially as it draws to a close. The first two-thirds of the film
tick along quite superbly, with Dan quietly suffering Carter’s callowness at
the office but still developing a fatherly affection for the kid, still unaware
of his affair with Alex. But when the relationship is finally exposed and after
Alex, Dan, and Carter are forced into an emotionally bruising confrontation,
the film doesn’t seem to know where to go. First, it’s back to the office for
some corporate synergy shenanigans involving the corporate boss who bought the
magazine in the first place (Malcolm McDowell, playing a sort of gleefully
satanic cross between Richard Branson and Barry Diller) and a clunky rant that
appears to be against globalization – or something. Then Dan and Carter have to
team up for One Big Sell, which might have made for a dramatic, albeit
predictable closer, if Weitz didn’t treat it so perfunctorily, as though he
were saying, “I know this is what the audience wants here, so I’ll give it to
them, but that doesn’t mean I have to like it.”
There’s a fantastic movie buried somewhere in here, and maybe Cameron Crowe or
James L. Brooks could have pulled it out, given the thing a dash of pop poetry,
and sent everyone home happy. As it is, In Good Company is pleasant enough
company for a couple of hours, but it’s difficult not to feel that all the hard
work on display here by Quaid, Grace, Johansson, and others is more than a
little wasted.
Commentary track and deleted scenes are the highlight of the film's DVD.
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Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





