Corporate greed. Downsizing. Success. Failure. Resilience. Triumph.
Rarely do I see a film that keeps me up at night, keeps me thinking about it. The reality of "The Company Men" hit home. Being a self-employed husband and father, who at times, considers going back to the comfort and security of full-time employment, I saw this film through a different lens. Mind you, it was long and drawn out and times, but I wasn't checking my clock to see how long it had been on either!
Movie synopsis via Wikipedia:
"The film, set in and around Boston, Massachusetts, analyzes the effects of corporate downsizing. Ben Affleck plays an aggressive white-collar corporate ladder climbing employee who, after losing his six-figure salary, gradually loses the trappings of his white-collar life (Country Club membership, Porsche, and finally his home) and finally has to take a job installing drywall with his blue-collar working brother-in-law, played by Kevin Costner. Chris Cooper plays a middle manager who has risen from the factory floors to the corporate offices. He also loses his six-figure salary job, but because of his age is finding himself unemployable. The pressures on the two men (both of whom had comfortable, but paycheck-to-paycheck lifestyles, and have children to support), grows as weeks and months pass by with no prospects of employment appearing. On the other side of the coin, the cushy lives of executive management are noted with both Tommy Lee Jones and Craig T. Nelson playing characters who suffer no misfortune during the trying times, until Jones' character is served his walking papers. Although Jones' character is a well-liked executive within the company that Affleck and Cooper's characters are close with. Maria Bello plays the unfortunate senior HR manager forced to deliver the bad news to staff whose jobs are cut and are shown the door. Jones is clearly in a much more comfortable position after being fired, and begins seemingly a form of retirement, seeking no other employment. Yet the effect of the downsizing upon others, along with his blue-collar tendencies to want to get back to the basics of men and women working hard to actually produce something of value, weigh upon his conscience and mind."
All-in-all, I would definitely recommend this one. Not for everyone, but it was inspiring, intriguing, and insightful to me! I really taught me the value of "owning your own" and the importance of Proverbs 13:22!
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JD
twitter.com/JRold
Wednesday, August 3, 2011