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adam lapish

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matt edge

matt.edge1@btinternet.com

 

2008 Reviews

Angus, Thongs & Perfect Snogging B (AL)

The Baader Meinhof Complex C (AL)

The Bank Job C+ (AL)

Body of Lies B+ (AL)

Burn After Reading C- (AL)

Cloverfield C+ (AL) A+ (ME)

The Dark Knight B- (AL) B+ (ME)

Death Race D+ (AL)

Donkey Punch F (AL)

Eagle Eye D (AL)

Easy Virtue D (AL)

Elegy A (AL)

The Forbidden Kingdom D- (AL)

Get Smart D (AL)

Ghost Town B+ (AL)

Gomorrah B (AL)

Hancock A- (AL)

Hellboy II: The Golden Army A- (AL)

In Bruges D- (AL)

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull B- (AL)

I've Loved You So Long A (AL)

Journey to the Centre of the Earth (3D) F (AL)

Mamma Mia! D (AL)

Man on Wire B+(AL)

Married Life B- (AL)

The Orphanage B- (ME)

Pineapple Express D- (AL)

Pride and Glory D (AL)

OSS117: Cairo - Nest of Spies D+ (AL)

Quantum of Solace C+ (AL)

Quarantine B- (AL)

Rambo D+ (AL)

[Rec] A (AL) A+ (ME)

Redbelt C (AL)

Sex and the City B+ (AL)

Shine a Light A (AL)

Taken C+ (AL)

Teeth B+ (AL)

Tropic Thunder B (AL)

The Wackness B- (AL)

Wall*E B+ (AL)

Wanted C+ (AL)

What Happened in Vegas B- (ME)

 

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Michael Clayton

USA, 2007

Director:

Tony Gilroy

Starring:

George Clooney
Tom Wilkinson
Tilda Swinton
Sydney Pollack

Matt: -

Adam: A-

   

 

This hotly anticipated legal thriller from debutant Tony Gilory, the writer of the Bourne films, pitches 3 actors with 5 Movie Years nominations between them. 3 of those are for the brilliant Tom Wilkinson, who costars in this as the corporate lawyer who goes off his meds and starts having a nervous breakdown. This is not good news for the company that he's representing, UNorth, headed by Tilda Swinton, who are in the middle of a 6 year, 3 billion dollar lawsuit, and probably even worse news for the law firm Wilkinson works for, whose $9 million that UNorth owe is now in jeopardy, not to mention a possible merger with a London firm and all credibility in their own country.

The law firm needs someone to save the day and that someone is Michael Clayton, played by George Clooney, the business's "fixer". Clayton is someone entrusted with fixing very delicate, often high profile situations, but a guy who's own life seems to be in need of fixing itself. He owes $80,000 to people he can't pay after a failed restaurant venture, he's separated from his wife and has a serious gambling problem. It's refreshing to see a 'hero' as troubled, although this wont be the first time in a review this year that I have praised the efforts of the writers of The Good Shepherd, Zodiac and Breach, who have also brought us screen characters that are as layered and interesting. It's been a great year for intelligent thrillers and this continues that pleasing trend.

Clooney is wonderful and totally convincing as Clayton. He enjoys several great scenes throughout the film, 2 notable ones with Wilkinson, and 1 with Swinton that is as satisfying a scene as you'll see all year. The credits roll over a fixed shot of Clooney in a cab and holds on Clooney for a good 3 or 4 minutes. Even here, doing so little, Clooney is totally magnetic as a screen presence that despite the credits rolling on a packed Saturday night, not one person left the theatre until we faded to black.

Wilkinson and Swinton provide more than able support. If I did have a criticism, I'd say it was perhaps too short. At a fraction under 2 hours, I think we could have spent another 20 minutes with these characters, particularly the two Brits who don't get as much screen time as I'd have liked. But it is hard to argue with Gilroy's decision to spend nearly every second with Clooney. It's an intelligent script and wonderfully directed debut effort. He doesn't pander to his audience. There's little or no exposition, everything is explained in the expressions and reactions of the great cast. It's pretty solidly tense stuff for the duration. It's punctuated once, and perhaps only once, but when it is, that one bit of downtime works so brilliantly set in this sort of relentless fillm that it ranks up there with the shot of the year. If you're not sure which one I'm on about once you've seen it, I'm talking about the scene with the horses. Just a beautifuly shot and mesmerising moment in film full of highlights.

AL