Film
George Clooney is a man who flies around the country firing people in Up in the Air.
Flight to Nowhere
George Clooney eases the ride through Jason Reitmans dissociated dystopia
By Steve Erickson
Up in the Air is a comedy, but its vision of a technology-addicted nation could also pass for science fiction a la David Cronenbergs Crash, in which only the characters psychology is futuristic or even horror. It gets its laughs from characters who suffer profound alienation and isolation from everyone around them, even the people they sleep with or claim to love.
The film, adapted from Walter Kirns novel, is full of sharp dialogue exchanges, descended from screwball comedy by way of Billy Wilder and the Coen brothers, but its characters alternate between flirting and passive-aggressive backstabbing. Sometimes its hard to tell the difference.
Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) pursues a career in which he flies around the country, firing people. He also works as a motivational speaker. He belongs to every travel loyalty program around. His lifetime goal is accumulating ten million frequent flyer miles. He meets Alex (Vera Farmiga) at an airport and becomes attracted to her, although she leads much the same itinerant life.
Ryans boss (Jason Bateman) wants to introduce a new technology that allows his company to fire people through webcams instead of traveling from city to city. Natalie (Anna Kendrick), a young new co-worker, accompanies Ryan on one of his trips, soon showing vulnerabilities underneath an icy facade.
Three movies into a career, there are a few qualities that make a Jason Reitman film distinctive. Visual style isnt one of them. On that level, Up in the Air is notable mostly for a handful of scenes chopped into quickly edited bursts. Reitman turns a trip through airport security into a virtual action scene.
The three elements that persist in the directors work are a reliance on snappy dialogue (drawing on screenwriters or novelists with strong voices), a fondness for fey indie rock and folk, and a conservative or at least right-leaning libertarian streak.
The politics of Up in the Air are a little more complex than the Sarah Palin-meets-Belle & Sebastian anti-abortion posturing of Juno. A real anger at corporate irresponsibility bubbles beneath it. When its laid-off employees start crying or threatening suicide, genuine economic anxieties burst through the films cool facade. All along, Ryan seems to realize that he too is eventually expendable.
Up in the Air may be economically liberal but socially conservative. Ryan preaches the benefits of a life without possessions, a category in which he seems to include people. Yet the film views this as empty blather. For Reitman, Ryan is pathetic for remaining single into middle age. Alex seems like his female counterpart, but she merely dabbles in the lifestyle that he carries out to its fullest extent. I suppose that by Hollywood standards, its refreshing to suggest that men, rather than women, are missing out on something by avoiding marriage.
Without Clooney, this would all be unbearably grim. The actor is immensely likable. Even reduced to the voice of an animated fox in Wes Andersons Fantastic Mr. Fox, he exudes charm and charisma. However, the film isnt his alone; Vera Farmiga proves his match as a performer.
Its hard to critique technology without coming across like a fuddy-duddy, but Up in the Air brings a refreshing wit to scenes in which Alex and Ryan face each other and talk while typing on their laptops. In the films press kit, Reitman says, Were all using our cell phones and twittering and texting
while, in reality, people dont look each other in the eye much anymore, and we have fewer real relationships. Ryans life in airports is a metaphor for that.
The film takes place in a homogenous corporate dystopia where empty goals like flying ten million miles are all that can sustain a person. Were not far from Neil LaButes In the Company of Men; in some ways, the behavior in Up in the Air may be worse because its not grounded in personal malice.
For the most part, this is a glib film about glib people, but its noteworthy for the traps it avoids. At a crucial point, it offers Ryan a chance at a facile redemption, then takes it away. It never directs its characters toward easy solutions. Clooneys performance may soften the blow imagine the film with an obese actor in his place but Up in the Air delves into difficult emotional territory honestly.