|
Up in the Air


Directed by: Jason Reitman
Starring: George Clooney
Genre:
Drama
Run Time: 108
min.
Release Date: December 2009
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
Think you’ve got plenty of frequent flyer miles? Wait until you meet
Ryan Bingham (George Clooney,
BURN AFTER READING), a guy who
flies almost nonstop. It’s his job that gets him UP IN THE AIR all the
time. He travels around the States firing people as humanely as he can.
Trouble is, though, is that this job makes him the most detached person
alive. No family ties. Not married. No kids. Not even a real home
anywhere. Ryan lives out of his carry-ons and knows how to move through
airports like grease through a goose.
But things are about to change. His boss Craig (Jason Bateman,
SMOKIN’
ACES) just hired a hot-shot who’s idea to tele-fire people remotely (via
computer) has the potential to ground Ryan. But he’s not giving up
without a fight. This new up-and-comer named Natalie (Anna Kendrick) has
a few thins to learn. So Ryan takes her on the road with him to show her
why firing face-to-face has its merits.
Paralleling Ryan is the female version of him; a woman named Alex
(Vera Farmiga, THE DEPARTED) who so mirrors his sentiments that they
seemed destined for one another. Sexual sparks fly but their jobs (and
flights) keep them apart more often than not. Which initially seems fine
for both of them.
As Ryan shows hot-shot Natalie the ropes of how-to and how-not-to
fire someone, we learn that Natalie is more brittle than previously
believed. A broken relationship with a boyfriend sends her reeling, much
to the confusion of Ryan who’s never had a serious relationship in his
life. "Everything I own can fit in this backpack. Even my
relationships."
But as Ryan sees his job changing, he also sees his life moving in a
different direction. He’s headed for a three-way fulcrum. The first is
that he might actually need someone. And as he begins to see that not
everything fits so neatly into his backpack, his feelings for Alex
change his views. The second is that he has a family member who’s about
to get married, and he finds that seeing a wedding and how people
actually enjoy needing one another changes his outlook. And finally we
get to his frequent flyer miles. He’s about to hit a milestone that only
a handful of other people have made it to. Millions upon millions of
miles. And as the realization that he’s collected all of these miles
alone comes to him, he finds that maybe, just maybe, he needs to make a
connection ...not a connecting flight but an actual human connection.
It is here that I have to end my summation of the movie and simply
say that this isn’t going to be some formulaic film where a person finds
what they need and everyone lives happily ever after. Life just isn’t
that cleanly laid out. I applaud writer/director Jason Reitman for
having the gumption to not take the road most traveled. Although I saw
what was coming for Ryan after he decided to make a change, the impact
of it astounded me. Clooney did a great job making us care for a man
that we really shouldn’t care for. We want to give him a shot at a
normal life, but when that option is snatched away, we feel exactly the
same way Ryan does: cheated. Even though he’s been a complete butthead
most of his life.
This is a story with no special effects. No tricks. And it pulls no
punches. It’s just a great story well-told. I loved it.
(back to top) |
Image from Up in the Air

DVD cost: $33.98
Purchase:
Tower.com
(Blu-Ray)
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
A large amount of
the people we see fired in the film are not actors but people who were
recently laid off. The filmmakers put out ads in St. Louis and Detroit
posing as a documentary crew looking to document the effect of the
recession. When people showed up, they were instructed to treat the
camera like the person who fired them and respond as they did or use the
opportunity to say what they wished they had. A way to discern who are
the actors and who are the real people is that the real people do not
have dialogue with George Clooney or Anna Kendrick, as they were shot
separately.
Movie Quote: "Never
get behind old people. Their bodies are littered with hidden metal and
they never seem to appreciate how little time they have left. Bingo,
Asians. They pack light, travel efficiently, and they have a thing for
slip on shoes. Gotta love 'em."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Up in the Air
   |