Michael Clayton Movie Review
Michael Clayton Review

"Michael Clayton" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Tony GilroyProducer : George Clooney,Steven Soderbergh,Anthony Minghella,Sydney Pollack
Screenwiter : Tony Gilroy
Starring : George Clooney,Tom Wilkinson,Tilda Swinton,Sydney Pollack,Pamela Gray
Slowly but surely, George Clooney is venerating different decades from
Hollywood's storied past. His Ocean's larks with Steven Soderbergh are
throwbacks to the swinging '60s. He resurrected the paranoia of 1950s
McCarthyism in his directorial effort Good Night, and Good Luck, then recreated
a sinister, post-World War II film noir in The Good German (also with
Soderbergh). Confessions of a Dangerous Mind paid goofy tribute to '70s
small-screen icon Chuck Barris. Later this year, Clooney will crib comedic
styles from Cary Grant's 1940s romper-stompers for the romantic farce
Leatherheads.
And then there is Michael Clayton, a gripping and complicated thriller with
hush-hush undertones that would fit comfortably alongside similar films from
the 1970s -- think of Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation or Alan J. Pakula
The Parallax View, because Clayton writer-director Tony Gilroy certainly had
pictures of this fabric in mind.
The suspicious Clayton moves like a '70s picture but has roots in modern
industrial problems such as corporate deception and greed. Attorney Arthur
Edens (Tom Wilkinson) leads the defense team in a $3 billion class-action suit
filed against U/North. The company is being sued by salt-of-the-earth farmers
because of a germ killer U/North used despite knowing it was hazardous to
people's health. Pay little attention to the details, though, because this plot
is one of the largest MacGuffins we've seen in years. The story is about the
lawsuit without really being about the lawsuit, if that makes sense. The
picture, after all, isn't titled U/North, right?
No, Gilroy chose Michael Clayton because his script eventually focuses on the
man (Clooney), a legal fixer and B.S. filter for corporate law firm Kenner,
Bach & Ledeen. His weight is felt when Edens' guilty conscience catapults him
over the edge of sanity. Edens obtained documents proving U/North knew of the
chemical's harmful effects, but buried the findings to continue turning profit.
Now Edens wants to blow a few whistles, and the higher-ups and Kenner, Bach &
Ledeen assign Clayton to ensure that doesn’t happen.
As a writer, Gilroy adequately balanced tension and plot in three Bourne movies
and Proof of Life. His iron-clad Clayton script improves his storytelling
skills. He has a solid grasp on a muddy morality mess -- not an easy task. This
multi-layered character study requires audience patience as it constructs the
tiers, but rewards us with surprising discoveries. Clooney and Gilroy keep
character details in the shadows. They both comprehend when and where to shine
a metaphorical light, though, unraveling the plot and revealing another piece
to this complicated individual.
Directorially, Gilroy shows us the sweat that paranoia can produce. His tightly
paced film teeters along the proverbial razor's edge between doing what's moral
and what is beneficial. Clayton has been doing the latter for so long, he's not
sure he remembers how to do the former. Gilroy also has a good eye for shots
that say more than what is initially implied.
These morally ambiguous characters seem to attract Clooney. He's at his best
wallowing in the gray area between noble and devious. Even his highest-profile
roles fit the mold, from well-intentioned con artist Danny Ocean to crime
fighter Batman and his alter ego, Bruce Wayne.
Clooney gets great support from his co-stars. When not producing and directing,
Sydney Pollack remains capable of dramatic potency as an actor. He is excellent
as Marty Bach, a partner in Clayton's firm and a man who has grown weary
putting out fires. Wilkinson can work up a frenzy, but he also musters
compassion for his emotionally scarred lawyer. And Swinton, the opposite end of
the spectrum, is as cold and clinical as the picture needs her to be. In one
pivotal scene, Swinton can be seen rehearsing the lies she will give in an
interview. Gilroy helps blur the line between fiction and fact by interspersing
her practiced speech with the actual media cross-examination. It's one of those
crisp interactions Gilroy uses throughout his excellent film to wring deeper
meaning out of what could have been a simple scene.
Swinton peruses her copy of If I Did It.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





