Quaid, Grace make for ‘Good Company’
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ALLEN MACDONALD
Paul Weitz’s new comedy, “In Good Company,” goes to show that a
commercial, mainstream feature doesn’t have to be a formulaic, vapid
affair. This film boasts a fine cast, top-notch storytelling,
character depth and an unconventional ending that is gutsy for a
studio effort but true to the established story.
It is a film that strives to find the humanity in a largely
sterile, cutthroat, corporate world in the vein of Cameron Crowe’s
“Jerry Maguire” and the earlier film that served as an inspiration
for that film and this one, Billy Wilder’s 1960 classic, “The
Apartment.” Paying homage to Wilder is a heady, ambitious task, but
Weitz shows, like Crowe before him, that he’s absolutely up for the
challenge.
Dan Foreman (Dennis Quaid) has been a highly successful
advertising executive for a magazine called Sports America (think
Sports Illustrated) for the last 20 years. But times are changing and
the magazine is bought out by a corporate behemoth owned by the
enigmatic Teddy K (portrayed in a devilish cameo by Malcolm
McDowell), which causes a major shake-up within the Sports America
division.
Suddenly, careers are in jeopardy and the future is uncertain as
26-year-old marketing wunderkind Carter Duryea (Topher Grace), who is
25 years Dan’s junior, replaces Dan. Much to Dan’s surprise, Carter
wants to keep him on as his “wingman.” It’s a mutually beneficial
arrangement since Carter has zero experience in magazine advertising
and Dan desperately needs to keep his job since his daughter Alex
(Scarlett Johansson) has just transferred to New York University and
his wife, Ann (Marg Helgenberger), has announced that she’s pregnant
again.
What complicates matters further is when Carter falls in love with
Dan’s daughter. This is also a touching, heartfelt and honest
subplot, but it exists to serve the main relationship in the movie
between Dan and Carter.
Carter considers himself a “machine” -- and, at the outset, seems
to be the epitome of naked ambition and Darwinian drive, but we
quickly learn that what pushes ... no, shoves him forward is his fear
of total failure. If he stopped and realized that he’s in over his
head in his new job, he would totally unravel; Carter’s like a shark,
he needs to keep swimming to push the oxygen through his gills or
he’ll die. These fears are heightened when his young wife decides to
leave him and a deep-rooted loneliness settles into his eyes.
What’s fascinating about Carter is that Weitz allows you to see
him for the young, inexperienced man he is, but we also are shown the
shrewd decision-making skills that he possesses that have made him
rise so quickly through the ranks. He has a heart, but possesses the
capability to turn it off and make cold, calculating decisions when
he has to -- and that includes firing men nearly three decades his
senior, when he determines that they’re not pulling their weight.
Grace makes the story work because you believe there’s a chance
he’ll fire Dan. And eventually ... some hard decisions get made.
On the other hand, Dan is confronting mid-life with a twinge of
fear himself. He feels like a dinosaur, past his prime, no longer
needed by his family and outliving his welcome in the competitive
business world he’s succeeded at over the last two decades. The
business world is changing, and he’s plagued with doubt that he
doesn’t have the strength to change with it once again. One gets the
sense Dan would almost be relieved to be fired if so many people
weren’t depending on him. Quaid’s face betrays the weight and fatigue
of responsibility.
So you can see where this is going: Dan has never had a son;
Carter has never had a father. Dan envies Carter’s youth and energy;
Carter envies Dan’s full family life. It sounds contrived, but really
plot devices such as these are contingent on how the writer and
director (in this case, the same person) handle the interaction. This
film is a revelation in subtle restraint when showing its characters
dance around in an attempt to learn to trust each other. These two
men admire each other and have a lot they could learn if they let
their guards down.
“In Good Company” is a smart film with a simple premise that
impressively juggles several complex relationships. Weitz, whose
earlier work (with brother Chris, who co-produces this effort) was
“About a Boy” and the original “American Pie,” shows a keen eye for
people and what makes them tick. He, like the late-great Billy
Wilder, brings the quiet moments between two people to life, but also
infuses them with a searing truthfulness that stays with you long
after the curtains close.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
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