In America, we give our lives to our jobs. It's time to take them back.
Director: John Wells
Producer: Claire Rudnick Polstein, Paula Weinstein, John Wells
Bobby Walker lives the proverbial American dream: great job, beautiful family, shiny Porsche in the garage. When corporate downsizing leaves him and two co-workers jobless, the three men are forced to re-define their lives as men, husbands and fathers.
104 min
Rating: 6.531/10
Released
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Top Cast

Ben Affleck
Bobby Walker

Tommy Lee Jones
Gene McClary

Chris Cooper
Phil Woodward

Kevin Costner
Jack Dolan

Maria Bello
Sally Wilcox

Rosemarie DeWitt
Maggie Walker
Movie Info
Director: John Wells
Producer: Claire Rudnick Polstein, Paula Weinstein, John Wells
Production Companies: Battle Mountain Films, Spring Creek Pictures, The Weinstein Company
Countries: United States of America
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What Others Said
Andres Gomez:
The story is quite flat and stereotypical. No ups and downs. Everything goes as expected and, of course, we have a hopeful positive ending for the needs of the US viewer.
The cast is impressive and direction, cut and performances are OK.
The Movie Diorama:
The Company Men calmly reflects a recessive economic climate through a downsizing company. Financial stability is the sole craving in everyoneâs life. The upper class. The middle class. Every class. The notion to which one will never encounter the fear of losing their personal possessions and their career position. Corporate employees specifically seek the solidity in their salaries, to be able to provide for their own pride and families. When the economic recession devastated the States last decade, its impact was critical. Innocent workers essentially lost their lives, driving themselves into the descent of debt.
Wellsâ well-intentioned drama explores the collapse of a shipbuilding corporation, following various employees that have been made redundant and/or steering the metaphoric sinking ship. Itâs an off-beat peculiarity that forces Wellsâ direction to be enticing and inadvertently unappealing simultaneously. The characters themselves, particularly Marketing VP Walker, HR Manager Wilcox and CEO Salinger, are insufferably narcissistic. Walker especially who envelops himself in pride, given the immense financial loss he encounters that prevents him from fully supporting his family and being able to play at luxurious golf club houses. The response to his firing, whilst natural in the sense that he refuses to release the life that he leads, abnormally thinks more about himself than his family. The overwhelming aura of egotism, not just from him, constrains these characters to be unlikeable.
Yet the peculiarity in Wellsâ execution is that, despite the vehement behaviour, thereâs a sympathetic undertone throughout. Not because you relate to the characters, but the scenario instead. Wells delicately leaves several moments to hang, simmering on a bed of dismissal, that forces you to position yourself in the charactersâ shoes. With that in mind, he manages to transform the unappealing characteristics of these employees and turn them into tolerable motives. Slowly but surely, through enduring perseverance, opportunities are tackled. And thatâs exactly the purpose of The Company Men.
It illustrates the tenacity of the human spirit during uncertain times. The orienteering session being a prime example of depicting this motive. Anyone who has been in a situation such as redundancy will relate to this film for its situational representation, not for its characters. Thatâs no criticism on the acting though, as each performance is competently given without resorting to melodrama. Cooper in particular gave a nuanced and credible performance, that left his characterâs fate somewhat unpredictable.
My main issue however is the scope of The Company Men. Instead of focussing on just one employee, Wellsâ decided to explore the entirety of GTXâs corporate ladder. Whilst harmless for its narrative structure, it did downplay the severity of the recession. Almost making light of the national economic declination. Solely following one employee through this hard time wouldâve produced greater character development whilst also tackling the recession from each angle. Wellsâ intentions were clear, just didnât entirely work for me on an emotional level. Fortunately Deakinsâ cinematography consistently entranced with his beautiful autumnal shots, but thatâs not surprising letâs be honest.
Much like precariously balancing on the corporate tightrope, The Company Men occasionally stumbles with its peculiar narrative and character choices yet seemingly gets the job done with assured performances and a heartfelt motive. Remember, remain positive even in the darkest of moments.