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Film

Review: The Company Men

Office drama does the job

March 10, 2011 10:44
Fine performances from Maria Bello and Tommy Lee Jones illuminate The Company Men

ByJonathan Foreman, Jonathan Foreman

2 min read

It is easy to see why many American critics disliked The Company Men, the quietly powerful movie debut of ER creator John Wells. Yes, it boasts a spectacular cast, including Ben Affleck, Kevin Costner, Tommy Lee Jones and Chris Cooper. But some of it, especially in the first act, exudes an earnest Hollywood high-mindedness that brings to mind a bunch of tanned executives sitting around a pool in the Beverly Hills sun congratulating themselves on their concern for the less fortunate.

Moreover, unlike most Hollywood attempts to deal with the travails of citizens confronted by economic catastrophe, it is about members of the executive class who lose their jobs. This prompted remarks from critics about their inability to sympathise with "rich white men" who are made redundant.

But it is arguably to the credit of writer-director Wells and his team, that he has the courage and curiosity to explore the impact of lay-offs on people who think that they have securely "made it" into the upper middle-class.

More problematic is the film's depiction of the way of life enjoyed by the executives of a fictional Massachusetts transportation conglomerate that was once a shipbuilding company. The main character, a 37-year-old sales associate called Bobby and played by Ben Affleck, lives in a vast suburban mansion and drives a Porsche.