The Company Men




Category: Drama
Year: 2010
Rating: 6.8/10 ()
Director: John Wells
Country: UK
Language: English
Runtime:
109 min
Release Date:
21 January 2011
(USA)
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Taglines:
In America, We Give Our Lives To Our Jobs. It's Time To Take Them Back
Movie Storyline
The story centers on a year in the life of three men trying to survive a round of corporate downsizing at a major company - and how that affects them, their families, and their communities.
Cast:
Ben Affleck
-
Bobby Walker
Thomas Kee
-
Mifflin
(as Thomas R. Kee)
Craig Mathers
-
Conners
Gary Galone
-
Karlson
Tommy Lee Jones
-
Gene McClary
Chris Cooper
-
Phil Woodward
Suzanne Rico
-
Gail
Adrianne Krstansky
-
Carol
Lewis D. Wheeler
-
Ken
Celeste Oliva
-
Jane
Tom Kemp
-
Conal
Nancy Villone
-
Diane
Chris Everett
-
Barbara
Maria Bello
-
Sally Wilcox
Lance Greene
-
Landry
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Sound Mix: Dolby Digital
Color: Color
Filming Locations: Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Official Site(s):
Official site |
User Review:
More like company boys than men
, rated: 6/10
Three loyal executives get axed in a corporate downsizing frenzy that
upends their lives. They each cope differently as they slip through the
cascading stages of anger, humiliation, anxiety, introspection and so
on, until they find their own resolve.
I saw this at the Sundance Film Festival premiere in Brookline, MA,
prepared to be gripped by the powerhouse cast and the up-and-coming
writer/director, John Wells. However, plot twists appear to have been
on backorder, and the situations add up to little more than a sidelined
subplot of Up In the Air. This is a situation drama, sort of like a
situation comedy without the comedy (although it does have some humor).
Fortunately, the cast is a treat. Ben Affleck is convincing as the
shot-down hotshot, Bobby Walker. And who can resist Tommy Lee Jones and
Chris Cooper as the older casualties? But they act more like boys than
men, exhibiting the angst of spoiled teens. This is not to say that job
loss and financial ruin are to be taken lightly. It's just that the men
could have used some deeper dimension and pithier dialog like that in
Glengarry Glen Ross, which much more powerfully conveys similar kinds
of employee desperation and employer evil.
Rosemarie DeWitt as Maggie Walker admirably plays Bobby's (Affleck's)
adult supervision. (Of interest, she is married in real life to Ron
Livingston, the hero of Office Space, a cult favorite with a comedic
take on similar themes.) Kevin Costner tries something different as a
brash building contractor who helps Walker. However, his over-the-top
Boston accent works against him, as does his apparent ignorance of how
to do a proper renovation (plywood, really?).
There are a couple of odd distractions. For instance, Tommy Lee Jones's
character says his CEO pal (played by Craig T. Nelson) was his college
roommate, when we all know Jones roomed with Al Gore.
In short, Wells as a writer/director is not (at least yet) a David
Mamet or a Ben Affleck (Gone Baby Gone was a triumph). But if you
downsize your expectations, you may enjoy this anyway.
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