After his company saddles him with a new trainee, a downsizing expert questions his empty, on-the-road lifestyle and begins a relationship with a fell
Up in the Air transforms some painful subjects into smart, sly comedy--with just enough of the pain underneath to give it some weight. Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) spends most of his days traveling around the country and firing people; he's hired by bosses who don't have the nerve to do their layoffs themselves. His life of constant flight suits him--he wants no attachments. But two things suddenly threaten his vacuum-sealed world: his company decides to do layoffs via video conference so they don't have to pay for travel, and Bingham meets a woman named Alex (Vera Farmiga,
The Departed), who seems to be the female version of him… and of course, he starts to fall in love. Writer-director Jason Reitman is building a career from funny but thoughtful movies about compromised people--a pregnant teen in
Juno, a cigarette-company executive in
Thank You for Smoking. George Clooney has a gift for playing smart men who aren't quite as smart as they think they are (
Michael Clayton,
Out of Sight). The combination is perfect: Bingham is charming and sympathetic but clearly missing something, and
Up in the Air captures that absence with clarity and compassion. The outstanding supporting cast includes Anna Kendrick (
Rocket Science), Jason Bateman (
Arrested Development), Danny McBride (
Pineapple Express), Melanie Lynskey (
Away We Go), and others, each small part pitched exactly right.
--Bret Fetzer