Nov 2 2006

A great satire that mana­ges to make a ciga­rette lobb­yist the hero, somehow.

Aaron Eckhart holds the pic­ture together with a witty, cha­ris­ma­tic per­for­mance as a tobacco lobb­yist. The film is basi­cally about his pro­fes­sion as he spins the news, pitches a movie idea, dod­ges a sub­poena, has an affair with a repor­ter (Katie Hol­mes), tries to spend time with his son (Came­ron Bright), and has lunch with an alcohol lobb­yist (Maria Bello) and a firearms rep (David Koech­ner) — where they lite­rally com­pare body counts. The per­for­man­ces are exce­llent across the board, from William H. Macy’s cru­sa­ding Sena­tor to Rob Lowe’s smir­king Holly­wood agent who struts around his office in a kimono. Even Adam Brody is enjo­ya­ble as Lowe’s hype­rac­tive assis­tant whose in-joke with a co-worker ear­ned one of the big­gest laughs of the movie.

The majo­rity of the cre­dit, howe­ver, needs to go to first-time fea­ture direc­tor Jason (son of Ivan) Reit­man. Adap­ting from Chris­topher Buckley’s novel, Reit­man has fashio­ned an enor­mously cle­ver script, con­sis­tent and strong in cha­rac­ter, yet not for­get­ting to be inc­re­dibly funny. The style is also per­fect — brisk, light-hearted, with impec­ca­ble timing marred only by a tan­gen­tal sub­plot inc­lu­ding Sam Elliott that is, sadly, not very funny. Ove­rall, howe­ver, the pace is fast enough where the laughs keep coming.

Reit­man also does the unthin­ka­ble: he keeps the satire dark and funny to the very end. While most come­dies stray blindly into the sen­ti­men­tal, “Thank You” avoids unne­ces­sary emo­tio­nal tripe and — thank­fully — avoids ser­mo­ni­zing about the dan­gers of smo­king or of the flaws of the poli­ti­cal pro­cess. Eckhart’s flaw­less per­for­mance and Reitman’s won­der­ful screen­play anchor an uncom­monly per­cep­tive comedy, pro­vi­ded you take yours black. If you need a little cream and sugar, “Fun with Dick and Jane” might still be at the dollar theater. — Com­ments writ­ten by Paxa­tron

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