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The Fine Art of Self-Deception
Matt Damon Takes a Comedic Turn in The Informant!
BY Steven D. Greydanus
October 4-10, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/25/09 at 12:00 PM
There are so
many twists and turns to Steven Soderbergh’s deceptively lighthearted dark
comedy The Informant! that by the time the end
credits roll, it’s hard to recall that it all began with orange juice, maple
syrup, biodegradable trash bags, jumbo shrimp and chickens.
What do all these things have in
common? Corn. Maple syrup and orange juice? Corn syrup. Trash bags? Corn starch
makes them biodegradable. Chicken? Feed them lysine, an amino acid derived from
corn, and they go to market in six months instead of eight. Jumbo shrimp? Take
a guess.
“Corn goes in one end,” Marc
Whitacre (Matt Damon) confides in an inner monologue voice-over as he walks the
office floors of Archer Daniels Midland, “and profit comes out the other.”
Whitacre was a divisional president
at ADM in charge of bioresearch in the early 1990s, and if you haven’t read
Kurt Eichenwald’s The Informant: A True Story,
on which the film is based, and don’t otherwise know Whitacre’s story, don’t
Google him if you’re planning on seeing the film (and watch out for reviews,
many of which reveal too much).
It’s better to let the tale progress
on the screen like a multicourse meal at an unfamiliar restaurant.
All I will say is that, from the
corn thing, The Informant! descends into a complex web
of international corporate crime, whistle-blowing and a lengthy, covert federal
investigation. It’s part Erin Brokovich or The
Insider big-business malfeasance and whistle-blowing, part breezy Catch
Me if You Can or Burn After Reading
caper comedy, with a bouncy score by Marvin Hamlisch and 1960s-esque title
captions.
There’s a lot to chew on. Still,
there is a moment when Whitacre comes face to face with a plate of puffy jumbo
shrimp and the whole premise of putting corn in everything is more than enough
to give you pause, with or without criminal profiteering.
On the other hand, who wants to give
up $27 trays of 50 jumbo shrimp at Costco? Bring on the corn.
Whitacre’s internal monologue is a
brilliant twist on a hackneyed narrative device. At times, he seems to be
taking us into his confidence, explaining to us the inner workings of not only
corporate success, but corporate malfeasance. It’s as if we were getting the
voice-over from the tell-all memoir or exposé he never wrote.
But then at other times his thoughts
merely flit randomly from one irrelevant topic to another, pondering the
correct pronunciation of Porsche, the size of a co-worker’s paycheck, the
unsavory vices of Japanese businessmen, and a possible premise for a TV show
about a man pursuing his own doppelgänger.
It’s quirky and amusing: a
Tarantino-esque stream of pointless dialogue internalized into stream of
consciousness, peppered with pop-culture cross-references to the corporate
thrillers of 1993, The Firm and Rising
Sun.
But the moments Whitacre chooses for
some of these meditations — in the midst of crucial meetings with corporate
partners and FBI investigators — bespeaks a restless, isolated mind, withdrawn
into itself, abstracted from the routines of daily life.
And then the other shoe drops, and
we start to grasp that the explanatory intimations of his monologue aren’t just
plot exposition, or after-the-fact exposé-style narration, but the narrative
that Whitacre tells himself about his own life as he lives it.
Lonely,
isolated people sometimes fill the psychic space around themselves by looking
at the routines of their lives as if through the eyes of a stranger or someone
unfamiliar with what they do — an absent family member, say, or a visitor from
another country or even another era — and imaginatively proceed to show that
other person around, explaining their lives to themselves as they would to
someone else.
But
how reliable is such self-explanation? Whitacre presents himself as Tom Cruise
in The Firm; he sees himself as a hero, and there’s a case
to be made that he is — and people willing to make that case.
As
the movie tells it, the real hero could be Whitacre’s wife, Ginger (excellent
Melanie Lynskey), who twists her husband’s arm to tell the nice FBI agent
(Scott Bakula) what he knows, even threatening to tell him herself if he
doesn’t, and who then stands by her man through thick and thin.
Although Whitacre jokingly assigns himself the
code name “0014” because he’s “twice as smart as 007,” the character is
light-years removed from a superspy — which, of course, is the point for Damon,
coming off the Jason Bourne series.
With 30 extra pounds, an unglamorous
moustache and an embarrassing hairpiece, Damon is a comedic natural as the sort
of compromised schlub often played by William H. Macy, but with an extra spark
of charisma and intelligence, which makes sense for a Ph.D. who became the
youngest vice president in ADM history and pulled off, well, what happens in
this movie — and, in the aftermath, went on to earn a pair of law degrees,
among other things.
Toward the end of The
Informant! is a crucial scene in which the walls are closing in and
something unexpected happens to Whitacre’s interior monologue: It begins to
converge with the actual discussion he is having.
In
a disconcerting way, there is almost a disconnect as he begins thinking things
before saying them and actually saying what he is thinking. And then comes a
shattering question for which he has no answer — except the intractable truth.
Each of us would like to think that,
in such situations as the movie poses, we would do the right thing; in moments
of crisis, we tell ourselves that that is what we have done. The
Informant! confronts us with the inveterate human capacity for
self-justification and self-deception — and the extent to which we are all
prone to casting ourselves as the hero of our own drama and the victim of our
own tragedy.
Steven D. Greydanus is editor
and chief critic at
DecentFilms.com.
Content Advisory: Limited profane language and a number of obscenities, brief crass remarks
and language, and a comment about a perverted practice. Mature viewing.
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