Sunday, February 14, 2010

Up In the Air

4 1/2 out of 5 Stars




George Clooney plays Ryan Bingham, a company man who travels the country to fire people from their jobs in this adult oriented comedy directed by Jason Reitman. Ryan has spent the majority of his adult life away from family traveling from place to place. This is his life and he enjoys it. Than a young woman, Natalie Keener(Anna Kendrick) is hired at his company and incorporates the idea of setting up electronic means to do the companies job. Of course Ryan is against this change and soon we are following him on his journey of showing the Natalie the ropes of the job as he continues on the lonely structure of his life.

Up In the Air is a film that succeeds on so many levels. It encompasses what film is and has been since the beginning in many aspects. It brings story and character to the screen. We are brought into the world of someone we would normally hate and we feel where he is coming from. George Clooney grabs our hearts as the company man who has no real path in life. He is alone but doesn't see it. On his journey he meets a woman who he begins to have an intimate fling with, what he calls a casual relationship. Soon enough Natalie Keener enters his life on the road and a story of love, life, and loneliness encompasses their conversations. As his sister is about to get married, and his company undergo major changes that could leave him at home, Ryan begins to question his life ethics.

The story and characters of the film are surrounded by a soundtrack that fits the mood of the film. Although the cast is big, the film has the film of a smaller independent film. It brings home one of the greatest human themes of all; living and dying alone. As Ryan tells his sister's fiance, "Wasn't it lonely in that honeymoon suite all alone?" Nobody truly wants to be alone.

The ending may be predictable but the characters are so genuine that it doesn't matter. What matters is what is happening with those characters and what has been brought forth on the screen. It is a story we can all relate to. For the most part we can all understand unemployment, many of us being fired, and we can all understand feeling alone. This is a story about feeling alone in a crowd, even when we think we're not. The characters are set up perfectly in this story.

This is for certain one of the best heartfelt films I have seen in the past year.

1 comment:

  1. Hey, this is Kenny Nall from LHS and I just found out you have a blog. I'm a serious film fan myself and look forward to more reviews!

    ReplyDelete