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Michael Clayton (Widescreen Edition)
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Women Apparel Reviews
Michael Clayton (Widescreen Edition)
Reviews
Movie Reviews
Directory Reviews Movie ReviewsSearch by tag : Reviews, Movie Reviews, American Gangster, Denzel Washinton, Russel Crowe |
| Michael Clayton (Widescreen Edition) |
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| Written by Admin | |
| Saturday, 15 March 2008 | |
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George Clooney's performance drives this tense corporate thriller from Bourne
trilogy screenwriter James Gilroy, who makes his directorial debut
here. Clooney is the eponymous "hero," a burnt-out lawyer who cleans up
legal messes created by the clients of a large law firm. When a crisis
materializes in the form of the firm's top shark (Tom Wilkinson)
suffering an apparent meltdown while defending a shady chemical company
from lawsuits, Clayton discovers not only a cover-up to deny payments
to farmers injured by the company's products, but a chance to find some
purpose in the face of his life's downward. Clooney (who also
co-produced the film) brings soul and quiet determination to his
beleaguered character, and there's excellent support from Wilkinson,
Sydney Pollack (also a co-producer), and Michael O'Keefe; Gilroy's
script also does a solid job of stacking the deck against Clayton as he
attempts to ferret out the truth behind the cover-up. Unfortunately,
the film settles for a pat conclusion that, while emotionally
satisfying, feels forced and delivers an overly simplistic message
(corporations can be bad; morally questionable work can make one feel
dirty). And Tilda Swinton is wasted in a thankless role as the chemical
company's nerve-wracked and unsympathetic legal counsel. Still, Clooney
fans will appreciate this fine addition to his growing roster of flawed
heroes. -- Paul Gaita
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