Director: Jason
Reitman | Starring:
Aaron Eckhart, Maria Bello, William H.
Macy, Robert Duvall, Katie Holmes, Adam Brody, Rob Lowe, Sam Elliott
Released: 2005
| Runtime: 92m
| Rating (out of 5):
*** |
|
Wow this thing would
have made a good book. Wait, it did! Actually I never read it but
understand that it sold pretty well. I recall people reading it, but
didn't really remember people feeling strongly about it either way.
After seeing the movie, I kind of understand why. It turns out this
movie isn't really about smoking and big tobacco at all. I mean, it
is in the sense that it's the shell that holds this satirical redemption
story together, but it was honestly just the most contemptuous topic
to put our main character, Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart), in. I mean
what group short of NAMBLA inspires as much ire as the greedy homicidal
cigarette industry? And if your protagonist is going to be a lobbyist
for said industry, that kind of makes him the devil's pitch man, eh?
And then the question becomes, do you have to actually have conviction
when arguing a side, or do you just have to win? Now our boy isn't
just some scrub lobbyist, he's the king of all persuasive bastards.
He pisses off people everywhere he goes, but remains, despite his
awful rep, the king of his kid's world. This terrible child actor,
who looks to be straight out of model kid school of central casting,
idolizes his father not because he's persuasive or powerful but merely
because he's his dad. And it seems our main dude can compartmentalize
his evil side and actually be a decent divorcee dad. And what does
he have to teach his son? Why, the only thing he knows, of course:
the power of words. There are some twists and turns that lead to Nick
having to reconsider his life. He is a man with no discernable skills
outside of speaking, and has absolutely no conviction or passion for
anything in his life. He even admits at one point that despite what
looks like overflowing joy putting his opponents in the ground is
merely a way to pay the mortgage. And then he realizes his son is
his passion, and that it's not cigarettes that motivate him, but the
ideas. The ideas. How else to explain that he (nor any character)
smokes a cigarette in the entire film? I'm sure I'm reading way too
much into this, and it was just meant to be an ironic satire on the
cigarette argument, as everyone, including the awesome-as-usual William
H. Macy as the anti-smoking politician from Vermont look like a bunch
of dopes, but I want to believe it went beyond that to a more human
story. I'm such a softy. Regardless of what the hell the movie is
about, I found myself saying (actually out loud) that Eckhart should
get more roles. The guy just oozes believability and makes a completely
hateable character into a completely sympathetic single dad with a
weakness for pretty girls and an awe shucks grin that makes us forget
he's vying with his buddies in the gun and alcohol lobby for the highest
body count. [HBO]
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