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The Company Men 2010 123movies

The Company Men 2010 123movies

In America, we give our lives to our jobs. It's time to take them back.Oct. 21, 2010104 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: The Company Men 2010 123movies, Full Movie Online – When the GTX Corporation must cut jobs to improve the company’s balance sheet during the 2010 recession, thousands of employees will take the hit, like Bobby Walker (Ben Affleck). Bobby learns the real life consequences of not having a job. Not only does he see a change to his family lifestyle, and the loss of his home, but also his feelings of self-worth..
Plot: Bobby Walker lives the proverbial American dream: great job, beautiful family, shiny Porsche in the garage. When corporate downsizing leaves him and two co-workers jobless, the three men are forced to re-define their lives as men, husbands and fathers.
Smart Tags: #gender_in_title #downsizing #porsche #corporate_downsizing #brassiere #female_topless_nudity #female_nudity #manager #volvo #sports_car #suicide #husband_wife_relationship #massachusetts #boston_massachusetts #family_relationships #saying_grace #prayer #looking_for_work #corporate_world #unemployment #fired_from_a_job


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Ratings:

6.7/10 Votes: 46,059
67% | RottenTomatoes
69/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 592 Popularity: 9.449 | TMDB

Reviews:


The Company Men calmly reflects a recessive economic climate through a downsizing company. Financial stability is the sole craving in everyone’s life. The upper class. The middle class. Every class. The notion to which one will never encounter the fear of losing their personal possessions and their career position. Corporate employees specifically seek the solidity in their salaries, to be able to provide for their own pride and families. When the economic recession devastated the States last decade, its impact was critical. Innocent workers essentially lost their lives, driving themselves into the descent of debt.

Wells’ well-intentioned drama explores the collapse of a shipbuilding corporation, following various employees that have been made redundant and/or steering the metaphoric sinking ship. It’s an off-beat peculiarity that forces Wells’ direction to be enticing and inadvertently unappealing simultaneously. The characters themselves, particularly Marketing VP Walker, HR Manager Wilcox and CEO Salinger, are insufferably narcissistic. Walker especially who envelops himself in pride, given the immense financial loss he encounters that prevents him from fully supporting his family and being able to play at luxurious golf club houses. The response to his firing, whilst natural in the sense that he refuses to release the life that he leads, abnormally thinks more about himself than his family. The overwhelming aura of egotism, not just from him, constrains these characters to be unlikeable.

Yet the peculiarity in Wells’ execution is that, despite the vehement behaviour, there’s a sympathetic undertone throughout. Not because you relate to the characters, but the scenario instead. Wells delicately leaves several moments to hang, simmering on a bed of dismissal, that forces you to position yourself in the characters’ shoes. With that in mind, he manages to transform the unappealing characteristics of these employees and turn them into tolerable motives. Slowly but surely, through enduring perseverance, opportunities are tackled. And that’s exactly the purpose of The Company Men.

It illustrates the tenacity of the human spirit during uncertain times. The orienteering session being a prime example of depicting this motive. Anyone who has been in a situation such as redundancy will relate to this film for its situational representation, not for its characters. That’s no criticism on the acting though, as each performance is competently given without resorting to melodrama. Cooper in particular gave a nuanced and credible performance, that left his character’s fate somewhat unpredictable.

My main issue however is the scope of The Company Men. Instead of focussing on just one employee, Wells’ decided to explore the entirety of GTX’s corporate ladder. Whilst harmless for its narrative structure, it did downplay the severity of the recession. Almost making light of the national economic declination. Solely following one employee through this hard time would’ve produced greater character development whilst also tackling the recession from each angle. Wells’ intentions were clear, just didn’t entirely work for me on an emotional level. Fortunately Deakins’ cinematography consistently entranced with his beautiful autumnal shots, but that’s not surprising let’s be honest.

Much like precariously balancing on the corporate tightrope, The Company Men occasionally stumbles with its peculiar narrative and character choices yet seemingly gets the job done with assured performances and a heartfelt motive. Remember, remain positive even in the darkest of moments.

Review By: The Movie Diorama

The story is quite flat and stereotypical. No ups and downs. Everything goes as expected and, of course, we have a hopeful positive ending for the needs of the US viewer.

The cast is impressive and direction, cut and performances are OK.

Review By: Andres Gomez
Stacking the Deck
What a crock! The Tommy Lee Jones character is super wealthy and the Chris Cooper character should have loads of money saved up. Even the Affleck guy being a sensible MBA would have put away loads in 14 years.

Most of the movie is only within 4-6 months of them losing their jobs. The Cooper character can’t pay his daughter’s tuition after working for 35 years and being at a high level? It’s so bad that he has no hope? I can see where the Affleck guy would have to cut back on expenses, because a lot of guys in his salary/benefits range overextend themselves, but it wouldn’t be drastic right away.

Also,the economy was the bad guy, not the company itself. Or is this all about one CEO making a bundle? The people were given generous severance packages and career counseling services.

I don’t even get the movie. I suppose the message is that big corporations are good when you work for them and make a bunch of money, but they are evil when they lay you off. Dry Wall guys who work with their hands and drink beers after work are spiritually holier than business executives? There was no character development of the CEO and very little of the other folks. Jones was an adulterer and kind of aggressive and rude. But suddenly he’s an idealist? Affleck’s guy seemed pretty shallow throughout, although he redeemed himself by helping a black guy find work.

I know that this was supposed to be some kind of profound statement about wealth inequality or the value of hands-on labor or the working class. But it didn’t make the case very well. I was left wondering what the hell the point was. They had good jobs, the economy went south, and they lost the good jobs. They weren’t protesting anything before they were let go.

I did enjoy the general scenery, and Affleck does have an appealing way about him on screen. Jones is the same guy in every movie.

If you watch it, keep your guard up and try to figure out what the heck the writer is trying to say, other than the basic “Occupy” manifesto.

Review By: dansview
Movie with heart
I was able to find this online even though it’s not at the movies, yet. The thing I like most about the movie is how it accurately depicts how the rich are getting richer in this recession while the bottom falls out for most of us. The daily news seems to report job losses in a matter-of-fact fashion these days. This movie puts a personal face on these out-of-work people – though dealing with it from the executive’s perspective. I guess making a movie about how those on the lower economic spectrum – those MOST affected – just wouldn’t be appealing enough for Hollywood. There would be the inconvenience of telling a story in which ALL of the characters remained in dire straits at the end – the way things still are today. I guess – like the politicians – Hollywood seems to be big on building hope in this one. At least by dealing with the layoffs from the executive’s perspective, they were able to show some people NOT rebounding, but others actually getting their feet back under them. All in all, worth watching.
Review By: edhow726

Other Information:

Original Title The Company Men
Release Date 2010-10-21
Release Year 2010

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 44 min (104 min)
Budget 15000000
Revenue 4882577
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama
Director John Wells
Writer John Wells
Actors Ben Affleck, Chris Cooper, Tommy Lee Jones
Country United States
Awards 2 wins & 11 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital, DTS, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Arriflex 535B, Zeiss Master Prime Lenses
Laboratory DeLuxe, Hollywood (CA), USA (color), DuArt Film Laboratories Inc., New York, USA, EFILM Digital Laboratories, Hollywood (CA), USA (digital intermediate)
Film Length 2,857 m (Portugal, 35mm)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 200T 5217, Vision2 500T 5218)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Super 35 (3-perf) (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (spherical), D-Cinema

The Company Men 2010 123movies
The Company Men 2010 123movies
The Company Men 2010 123movies
The Company Men 2010 123movies
The Company Men 2010 123movies
Original title The Company Men
TMDb Rating 6.5 592 votes

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