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Dirty
Jobs
To
a "fixer," everything looks broken
BY
JASON BLAIR
MICHAEL
CLAYTON: Written and directed by Tony Gilroy. Cinematography, Robert
Elswit. Music, James Newton Howard. Starring George Clooney, Tom
Wilkinson, Tilda Swinton and Sydney Pollack. Warner Bros., 2007.
R. 119 minutes. 
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| Tom
Wilkinson and George Clooney in Michael Clayton
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Though his output implies a wide range of abilities,
George Clooney has mastered a particular character type, one I'd
describe as a handsome scoundrel who is also a crusader/reformer.
(Possible, or rather partial, exceptions are Good Night and Good
Luck and Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, the two films
Clooney directed.) The degree to which Clooney's crusaders can succeed
is directly related to the amount of mischief they've been making:
Think of Everett, the ex-con in O Brother Where Art Thou?,
who pontificates impressively on all manner of subjects but cannot,
even in the film's closing moments, convince his estranged wife
to forgive him. I don't fault Clooney for working the same patch
of ground — in fact, I give him credit for his durable persona
— but the persona only works in the presence of vulnerability.
Danny Ocean, from the Ocean's movies, is invincible and therefore
uninteresting; Jack Foley, from Out of Sight, can't even
get his car to start, which is why Jack Foley is Clooney's best
role to date.
That Michael Clayton (George Clooney) is a sleepy-eyed
mess is one of the unexpected pleasures of Michael Clayton.
Michael has the dirty job (they don't call him "janitor" for nothing)
of keeping the clients his law firm defends out of trouble. In essence,
he's a high-priced chaperone who transitions into "fixer" mode when
laws and jaws get broken. As Michael's personal life unravels due
to debts from past mistakes, Alfred (Tom Wilkinson), a senior partner
at Clayton's firm, goes berserk during a deposition and disappears.
Complicating matters is Alfred's friendship with Michael. But of
greater consequence is Alfred's insistence that the firm's largest
client — a pesticide company — is knowingly killing
people. Is Alfred crazy or morally enlightened? It's not Michael's
job to find out, but if he delivers Alfred to Karen Crowder (Tilda
Swinton), the wicked head lawyer for the chemical company, she might
have Alfred "fixed" for good.
The problem at the core of Michael Clayton —
that there exists a higher authority than professional obligation,
but sometimes we must stoop before standing straight enough to see
it — is fundamentally more interesting than, say, the ridiculous
conceit of The Brave One, in which good people do terrible
things without consequence. Writer and director Tony Gilroy, who
wrote the fine Bourne series, adds a convincing fall from
grace to Michael's past, a stumble that handicaps him to this day.
Gilroy, in his directorial debut, smartly avoids digging too deeply
into the pesticide case — this could easily have been a film
about tobacco, or anything that's harmful when applied in high doses
— but his real achievement is in coaxing career-defining performances
from Clooney and Wilkinson. Clooney looks haggard throughout Michael
Clayton, and his performance strikes a fine balance between
exhaustion and determination. But it's Wilkinson who steals the
show here: He hasn't been this good since In the Bedroom,
largely because he's usually confined to the smaller roles reserved
for "character actors." Wilkinson deserves more, but let's start
with another Best Supporting Actor nomination, which surely he deserves
for Michael Clayton. Sydney Pollack is his usual pillar of
resolve — does anyone play compromised authority figures better?
— but Tilda Swinton, unfortunately, is miscast here. Her feline
features, tiny and delicate, aren't right for lead counsel Karen,
who emerges as a nasty villain of sorts. Otherwise, this credible
and intelligent thriller needs little in the way of fixing.
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