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(I can't stand Reitman myself. "Up in the Air" used the unemployed as 
potted plants and "Juno" amounted to anti-abortion propaganda.)

Slate Magazine
the oscars
Up in the Air
A slick Hollywood star vehicle dressed up by a mediocre filmmaker to 
look like an emblematic chronicle of our tough economic times.
By Dennis Lim
Posted Friday, March 5, 2010, at 9:55 AM ET

You can tell a lot about the American psyche from the groupthink that 
emerges around the designated movie of the moment—in particular, from 
the conventional wisdom on whether or not a given film has social or 
political relevance. Kathryn Bigelow's The Hurt Locker, despite its 
visceral view of war as madness and addiction, has been pegged as an 
Iraq war movie that has nothing to say about the Iraq war: action cinema 
unencumbered by politics. Meanwhile, Jason Reitman's Up in the Air, 
which stars George Clooney as a frequent-flying layoff specialist, is 
presumed to be an X-ray vision of the Way We Live Now, a film of 
tremendous social import that, per Frank Rich's endorsement in the New 
York Times, uses "the power of pop culture to salve national wounds that 
continue to fester in the real world." What does it say about the way we 
think now that the emblematic chronicle of our Great Recession sidesteps 
the economic plight of the unemployed to wallow in the existential 
crisis of the lonely corporate executioner?

A closer look at Reitman's work—and it should be noted that his films, 
with their slick surfaces, jaunty rhythms, and brisk patter, are 
designed precisely to discourage close looks—reveals a peculiar 
consistency, even though all three of his features have originated with 
the material of others (a Christopher Buckley novel, a Diablo Cody 
screenplay, a Walter Kirn novel). On one level, it is hard to fathom his 
success in the supposedly liberal bastion of Hollywood: His politics 
lean right when they are at all legible, and yet he's embraced as an 
insightful social satirist, the second coming of Billy Wilder. On a 
deeper level, though, this disconnect makes perfect sense: It speaks to 
the brazen hucksterism that is so much a part of Reitman's method. He's 
a mediocre filmmaker but a world-class panderer. His movies, which 
instinctively play to both sides of a charged issue, are the height of 
smoke-and-mirrors artistry, wholly dependent on the concealment and the 
semblance of meaning.

Reitman's first film, Thank You for Smoking (2005), centered on an 
obfuscating Big Tobacco lobbyist, belongs to the dubious genre that 
people like to call equal-opportunity satire—which is another way of 
saying that it sprays potshots in all directions to avoid anything so 
onerous as a point of view. Juno (2007), which won Cody a screenwriting 
Oscar just as Up in the Air looks set to do for Reitman and Sheldon 
Turner, works overtime to make an accidental pregnancy look like the 
cutest, wackiest thing that could possibly happen to a teenage girl. But 
Juno at least triggered some debate about its politics. Up in the Air 
has been widely taken at face value as social commentary, which is, more 
than anything, a sad reflection on what passes for real-world relevance 
in a Hollywood movie today.

Whatever Reitman's original intentions, Up in the Air has become a movie 
about its own significance. The director, an avid believer in his own 
press, has suggested that it is nothing less than "the portrait of 
2009." I honestly don't know what the film has to say about 2009—other 
than that it's kind of tough out there—and my guess is that Reitman's 
claim (which echoes the abundant critical praise for the movie's 
"eloquence" and "prescience") has something to do with the long history 
of evasion and denial in American cinema when it comes to matters of 
work and the workplace.

The first film in history was an 1895 short by the Lumière brothers with 
the self-explanatory title Workers Leaving the Factory. In the years 
since, as if in deference to their function as a leisure activity, 
movies have been largely blind to the daily rituals of work and the 
meaning it has in our lives (unless the characters are, say, detectives 
or assassins). Documentaries are the exception, as are sporadic outliers 
like Mike Judge. There is a kind of bracing novelty when a big movie 
with a glamorous star so much as glances in the direction of the real 
working world, where people toil, lose jobs, and struggle for survival 
(and have done so since long before 2009).

Reitman is canny enough to understand this effect and cynical enough to 
exploit it vampirically by padding out his film with testimonials from 
actual unemployed people (obtained under false pretenses: He held 
casting calls for the newly terminated, claiming that he was making a 
documentary about unemployment, and coaxed his subjects to relive their 
dismissals on camera). But Up in the Air isn't really about these 
authentic casualties of 21st-century American capitalism or their 
fictional counterparts. The jobless ranks merely form the backdrop—and, 
worse yet, provide the fodder—for its hero's rogue-charm offensive and 
redemptive epiphany.

Clooney's Ryan Bingham is a hatchet man with a human touch, whose method 
supposedly puts to shame the clumsily cold MBA manner of Anna Kendrick's 
go-getting upstart. When a middle-aged downsizing victim (played by J.K. 
Simmons) reacts with anger, Bingham, in what is supposed to register as 
a mark of empathy, advises the man to reconnect with his youthful love 
of French cooking. (It's a scene that could only have been engineered by 
someone who has never had to think twice about economic security.) 
Later, we learn that a woman who had threatened to kill herself when she 
was fired went ahead and jumped off a bridge. The news leaves Bingham 
with a heavy heart and leads him to recognize the emptiness of his 
career choice and business-class lifestyle. Up in the Air aspires to the 
panoramic force of a state-of-the-nation address, but it obeys the 
solipsistic rules of a Hollywood star vehicle.

Just as Juno smuggles anti-abortion sentiment into a self-consciously 
hip quirkfest, Up in the Air shape-shifts from a fondly critical view of 
the cruel business world to a family-values tract. Unemployed men and 
women attest to the renewed importance of friends and family, and the 
commitment-phobic Bingham, who has a sideline delivering motivational 
lectures on the art of traveling light, realizes, perhaps too late, that 
you do need baggage in your life after all. But maybe it's giving 
Reitman too much credit to suggest a sneaky Trojan-horse aspect to his 
work. Whether consciously or not, a Jason Reitman film is a mass of 
self-negating contradictions—they may add up to the illusion of 
complexity, but the net effect is zero.

Become a fan of Slate on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.
Dennis Lim is editorial director at the Museum of the Moving Image and a 
regular contributor to the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2246901/

Copyright 2010 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

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