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Movie Reviews:
In
The Company Of Men
Review by Katharine
E. Monahan Huntley
Bastards. That's
whose company we keep In
the Company of Men, writer/director Neil Labute's in your face
psychological (objective story domain) horror show of men who
betray women, men who betray colleagues, and men who betray each other's
trust (subjective story problem). How fitting that the
opening shot is of a men's restroom, a place where women are exempt,
with the exception of the maid who cleans up. It is here where we first
see Howard, the main character--a balding be-er (mc
approach) dabbing at his ear, nicked by a woman he has unwittingly
offended (mc concern-preconscious). Howard relays the incident
to Chad (obstacle character) as they sit in the airport courtesy
lounge, waiting for their flight. In appearance, Chad is everything
Howard is not--bleached blond and chiseled, starched and smooth. He
lights a smoke, decisively snaps his lighter shut, and spews his vitriolic
outrage towards feminists, upstairs executives, and Young Turks:
Chad:
This is the point I was making earlier, the 90s--can't even afford
to blink--I miss too much (oc concern-progress) . . . we're
like ten years out of university, you know, that's all, just ten.
And I got a whole crop of these young dudes after my desk (oc critical
flaw-worth). Taking jobs as production assistants. I mean, the
title didn't even exist two years ago . . . bunch of vultures waiting
for me to tire out. You know I get low numbers two months in a row,
huh--they're going to feed on my insides (oc issue-threat).
The objective
story goal explores the roles (being) played in corporate
politics, particularly when enacted to manipulate the power structure.
Howard and Chad are on a six week (story limit-timelock) assignment
of which Howard has been put in charge--a fact that galls status (oc
domain-universe) conscious Chad. Learning (story prerequisite),
that Howard has just been dumped by his fiancée, Chad conceives
(story requirement) of a way to undermine Howard's new position
by sidetracking him from the big picture (mental sex-male)--a
difficult task since Howard is results oriented (mc focus)
and has a fixed mindset (mc domain) on the business at
hand. Howard, however, is credulous, and believes Chad when he says
his own heart has just been stomped. He is wide open to Chad's scheme--an
over the top vicious blood sport (ss domain-physics)--an act
of revenge against all women:
Chad:
Listen--we're in town for six weeks, right? . . . And this is perfect,
what with the break-up thing you've got going too. Say we were to
find some gal . . . and this person is just vulnerable as hell, you
know, young thing, wallflower type, whatever, or like, disfigured
in some way. . . . We take a girl of that type . . . and we both hit
her. You know, small talk, a dinner date, flowers. . . . We just do
it (ss concern), you know, you and me, upping the ante all
the time. And suddenly she's got two men, she's calling her mom, she's
wearing makeup again. And on we play, and on and on. And then one
day, out goes the rug and us pulling it hard. And Jill, she just comes
tumbling after. Hour later we're on our flight back to civilization
like nothing ever happened. Trust me, she'll be reaching for the sleeping
pills within a week. And we will laugh about this until we are very
old men.
Howard reluctantly
decides (story driver) to fall in with Chad, and the head
games begin. A deaf secretary, young and graceful, is courted by both
men. Chad charms Christine and, at the same time, skillfully
(ss issue) sabotages the project. Harried Howard, overworked
(mc growth-stop), worried (mc issue), and distracted
by his romantic feelings for Christine, passes off less than okay work
as accurate (os problem), oblivious (ss inhibitor-thought)
to Chad's tampering. Howard is further undermined by his critical
flaw of fantasy. He equates need with love, and assumes Christine
will forgive him for making her the quarry in the diversion, and that
his camaraderie with Chad will remain intact after he breaks their trust
by confessing all to the secretary. The effect (os focus)
is that Christine rejects the loser. She is in love with Chad and confronts
him (os direction-cause) with what she knows (os catalyst).
Amused, Chad admits to the deception and stands back, inhaling Christine's
pain like a rare cigar. Game over, man.
And Howard comes
tumbling after. Chad's intolerable (os solution-non-accurate)
behavior is rewarded--he is less capable for the job, yet his acrobatics
on the corporate ladder (oc solution-process) render him a promotion
(outcome-success) and Howard a demotion. The subjective story
relationship ends with Howard's gut-wrenching realization that Chad's
girlfriend back home had never left him--that indeed Chad had lied to
create the illusion of an even playing field for the two men, adolescents
really, in a state of arrested emotional development ("I don't
want to shock you, Howard. . . . I mean, it's really just the same crap
we used to play in school.")
Ultimately, the
real abhorrence is not the ferocious sociopath Chad, but the relatively
sane Howard who voluntarily entered into the escapade. He has become
undone (resolve-change)--last seen in Christine's new place of
employment screaming over and over again "Listen, listen, listen,
listen, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen,
listen, listen, listen, listen, Listen To Me, listen, listen . . ."--words
that literally and figuratively fall on deaf ears (judgment-bad).
[See
In The Company Of Men Storyform for the Dramatica story engine
settings.]
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