Michael Clayton the directorial debut of Tony Gilroy
is not your typical legal thriller, it falls more in the visceral thriller
movies like “Network” and “Constant Gardener”. The film manages to grab our
attention immediately and without the normal recipe for a thriller movie.
Michael Clayton isnt a revelatory film, but it is a smart one that deals in
the grey world that we all live in, not the black and white one legal film are
usually about.
The movie starts off with a fantastic monologue from Tom Wilkinson, some
unexplained shots of characters in a degree of stress and an explosion to cap
it all off, your attention is gripped. Michael Clayton(George Clooney), a
"fixer" at a major Manhattan
law firm. His job profile is that of cleaning up others messes, not litigating
in a court room, He calls himself a “Janitor”. Things are not looking good for
him right now: his addict brother has run a business venture that Michael was
a partner in into the ground, leaving Michael with thousands of dollars in
debt; his relationship with his ex-wife is on the rocks, He hates the work, but
the senior partner at the firm, Marty Bach(Sydney Pollack), wants him to stay
and assigns Michael to restrain Arthur
Edens(Tom Wilkinson), who is a lead attorney for a major case for the firm
involving U/North, a huge, multifaceted corporation, has discovered startling evidence
and begins plotting to publicly expose
U/North, something that U/Norths lead corporate attorney, Karen Crowder(Tilda
Swinton) cannot allow and begins looking
at far more dangerous methods of containment. This is all I can say without
spoiling the movie.
Michael Clayton is a thriller that works
at a slower pace, but still manages to enthrall with its developments. Critical
to the films success is its performances. George Clooney gives us a Michael
who feels many aspects of his world closing around him and tries to keep all
the balls in the air. Finally, Tilda Swintons Karen Crowder is a woman who is
all about appearance and ensuring that no one rocks the boat of U/North. She
has sold her soul to the devil and will do anything to keep the company intact.
For me, the one actor in this movie who comes close to a scene-stealing
performance is Tom Wilkinson, who does a fantastic job at delivering Gilroys sharply-written
and very particular dialogue while portraying his characters bi-polar
disorder. He has been nominated for best supporting actor [Deservingly, though
its looks unlikely for anyone but Javier Bardem to win that one].
Michael Clayton is certainly not everyones cup of tea. It requires a strong
attention span and does not spoon-feed the audience. If you can handle that,
then it is a film experience that will provide some rewards