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‘Up in the Air’ – “Scene Selection” review of critically acclaimed Clooney

Scene Selection review of ‘Up in the Air
by Alex Kartman for Movieset.com

Characters always have driven films, starting with Chaplin’s Tramp to John Rambo to living figures. Simple stories follow these characters’ daily lives, but a film projects the evolution of a character to maintain audience interest. Plots and stories become difficult when evolving characters find themselves trapped in a stagnant world, or vice versa. “Up in the Air” focuses on this predicament more than most films this year, constructing a great story as it evolves.

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Story

George Clooney stars in his third film released within two months (“Fantastic Mr. Fox” & “The Men Who Stare at Goats” being the others) as Ryan Bingham in “Up in the Air.” Ryan travels the country as a consultant in charge of firing other companies’ employees. It isn’t exactly a glamorous job by any means; spending the majority of the year in hotels and racking up frequent flyer miles. He enjoys and lives for traveling, but eventually he faces the changing economic climate. His boss (Jason Bateman) assigns him a trainee, Natalie Keener (Anna Kendrick), to teach the psychology and tips of firing people. The film simply follows these endeavors of these two.

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Sounds like a depressing concept, yet the plot focuses on the relationship development. Natalie may only be a protégé, but she tries to drive Ryan out of his isolated existence, toward family and a woman named Alex (Vera Farmiga). All the while, comedy surrounds the film, through Clooney’s wit and the great writing. Some supporting actors bring their own style for laughs, including Zach Galifianakis and JK Simmons.

The singular and minor flaw of “Up in the Air” is the structure, that sometimes lacks cohesion, and even calling it a flaw is a stretch. It glows decently well, but at times it tends to feel like a situational comedy, with characters simply lading in new situations. To stop being devil’s advocate, the characters truly bind the film together because they stitch each transition together.

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Beyond the Lens

Jason Reitman directs his third feature with “Up in the Air,” and clearly he has mastered his craft; he simply was born to tell stories. He co-wrote the screenplay with Sheldon Turner as an adaptation. He knows how people interact and almost creates a Don Draper (the “Mad Men” lead) rival here, with a character leaving the audience wondering what that person’s personal beliefs really are. The story achieves greatness by avoiding romantic-comedy cliché with a heartfelt ending after a heartbreaking climax. Reitman’s writing and directing together add up to his best film, combining the charm and whit of “Thank you for Smoking” with the heart of “Juno.” To cap that off, the camera pushes the audience in and out of scenes with fairly ‘by the book’ movement until one scene in particular/ At Ryan’s sister’s wedding, the camera becomes part of the scene, through handheld, home movie look. You feel as if you are part of the scene, as the crazy aunt or uncle no one talks to. Everything pushes forward to the gorgeous final shot, leaving viewers without a doubt as to who Ryan will become.

Music

The music adds the final garnish to this amazing picture. The song, “Help Yourself” found playing throughout the aforementioned wedding scene is incredible, and encapsulates the entire mood of the film in the four minutes of lyrics and instrumental as it plays. It may be up for the Oscar’s Best Original song, but many of the other great songs throughout the film, including the title track “Up in the Air” won’t even be considered because of ludicrous Academy rules. I recommend giving the soundtrack a listen even after seeing the film because Reitman has a knack for music, as he proved with “Juno.”

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I feel like I’m not doing the film justice at all. It represents the evolution and culture shift of a generation, with Natalie as the twitter generation and Ryan as an aging baby boomer. The disconnect between them brings the main tension and plot drive, yet it feels natural to a younger viewer such as myself. I cannot wait to see what awards this brings in, but don’t let Academy Awards be the measure of how great this film is in the future.

Grade: A

More Up in the Air videos, stills and news

Author: Alex Kartman

I’m a student at Ball State University in Indiana, majoring in telecommunications. I direct and technical direct several student television shows, garnering an Emmy nomination for one of them. I also have worked on two feature films as a grip, a set photographer, and a boom op. My acting may not be the greatest, but I do have imdb credit as an actor as well. I have been reviewing films for a year now for the Ball State Daily news.
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2 Comments

  1. I really enjoyed this film also, for all the reasons aforementioned. I feel it is completely of this time, especially these snowy days in 2010. I loved it and can’t wait for Jason’s next picture!

    Reply

  2. Al

    George Clooney is outstanding in this movie and it really shows that he’s at the point in his career where he picks diverse intelligent movies versus the fluff he did earlier in his career. This would have been a mediocre movie without him, although this role was a bit of a risk on his part. The risk certainly paid off though!

    Reply

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