1/4/10
Reitman's Up in The Air
Up in the Air
Young Canadian director Jason Reitman co-wrote this adaptation (a 2001 novel with the same title) with George Clooney in mind. He plays the role of a transition counselor (Ryan Bingham) at a management consulting company, i.e, he is hired by companies with financial problems to fire their employees (people he never met). Bingham spends most of his time "en route", he perfected skills in packing, airport security check points, staying in hotels...etc. He collects limited-edition credit cards. He also lectures about a theory of leaving everything behind that he implemented in his book. Clooney gives a humble, believable, and smart performance; with narrative monologues and silent facial expressions dominating over dialogues.
The movie overall is the best that one can expect from an American movie these days: merely good (though not 100% true if T.Malick is really releasing his movie soon). Reitman has a promising story to tell, but he falls into cheesy cliches (moments like when Bingham leaves in the middle of lecturing and run after a woman he met, the predictable cliche continues with that woman -spoiler alert- being involved in a family and being a mother of a couple of kids....etc). Despite that, the movie actually works; mostly because of Clooney's excellent performance and a good -interesting- story, the movie actually doesn't conclude in the expected Hollywoodian way at all and that was an element of strength. Now do I recommend this movie? it depends; if you're bored with your books, and you don't feel like watching some great cinema on DVD, and you have a couple of hours on you... than yes (and that's not -again- because Up in The Air is a bad movie, as I said it's a good movie, and the best that you can expect in theaters screening crap like 2012...etc ). I had even a better reason to actually go and watch it: I wanted to try a cinebistro that is near a friend we were visiting at Tampa (Florida) and it wasn't bad at all. The theater has the usual-size big movie screen but only 40 seats (big couches) or so, most made for couples and mounted with a tray/table. I always liked having coffee (instead of soda and popcorn) but a couple of theaters in NYC have that, but having a wine bottle in a cooler next to your seat and being served "actual" serious restaurant-quality food (we're talking full menu) instead of the cheap, plastic, over-priced snacks...etc, is actually something!!! the theater was even more quiet than a usual movie theater (no kids, and way less audience).
Here's Reitman on Charlie Rose