Movie Review: Michael Clayton

In this classic, suspenseful drama, George Clooney plays a man caught between his conscience and the greed of corporate America. Reminiscent of many recent whistle-blowing cases, this film is a thrilling character study of people forced to make decisions, as depicted through a multi-layered story based on flashbacks.

Michael Clayton (George Clooney) is a 45-year-old attorney with the prestigious New York law firm of Kenner, Bach & Ledeen. He doesn't really practice law because he is used as a "fixer", better known as the man with the ability to solve other people's problems. A former criminal prosecutor from a working-class neighborhood, he is an anomaly at this high-powered firm. His boss Marty Bach (Sydney Pollack) finds Michael's talents a necessity in cleaning up the firm's uncomfortable problems quickly and quietly. Michael gets a call concerning the firm's top litigator, Arthur Eden (Tom Wilkinson), who has suffered a mental breakdown. This incident is linked to a cover-up jeopardizing a lucrative case, so Michael's talent for fixing a problem is needed. At the same time Michael has his own problems he needs to address immediately. His life is in a mess — he's a compulsive gambler, a lonely divorced man, and is under the pressure of owing money to "wise guys" due to an unwise investment in a restaurant business venture that failed.

The cover-up is the meat of the plot. This sets the tension up involving the corporate espionage of U/North Corporation, the client of Kenner, Bach & Ledeen. U/North's newly appointed chief counsel and litigator Karen Crowder (Tilda Swinton) finds her career hanging on the multi-million dollar settlement of a class action lawsuit. Arthur Eden's feelings of guilt over his part of representing U/North causes him to sabotage the case by becoming a whistle-blower. Arthur discovers evidence of toxic waste polluting a region resulting in illness and death. Murder and bribery isn't beneath anyone who wants to hide the secrets of corruption. Michael must decide on what is important in his life.

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Article Author: Gerald Wright

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