“Devastating, Yet Heartwarming”

“Hotshots” looks at a movie!

The Company Men - PosterTHE COMPANY MEN is a very good, yet devastating look at what the effect the economic recession of 2008 had on a group of successful businessmen who worked for the same company, as well as how it affected their families when they got fired.

No, “fired” is such an ugly word. Let’s just say they got “laid off.”

The company in question is an international transportation company with headquarters in Boston that started out as a shipbuilding company.

Ben Affleck stars as Bobby Walker, the head of the sales division for one of three shipyards in the company, where he has worked for 12 years, and he comes into work one morning all excited about the round of golf he had just shot only to be greeted by silence in a conference-room meeting of his department.

“What’s the matter?” he asks. “Did somebody die?”

Even though consolidating divisions had been discussed for months, two of the shipyards were closed, and the company lawyer, Sally Wilcox, played by Maria Bello, had fired Bobby without even telling him.

Excuse me. “Laid him off” without telling him.

When Bobby gets home, he tells his wife, Maggie, that he doesn’t want to tell anybody else what happened until he gets another job. Is he showing pride? Stubbornness? Stupidity?

Tommy Lee Jones plays Gene McClary, who started the company with his college roommate. He is friends with Bobby and invites him to lunch, but Bobby gets up and leaves after refusing Gene’s offer to help him.

Pride? Stubbornness? Stupidity?

Bobby believes that he is a 37-year-old loser without a job who can’t support his family, and when Maggie’s brother offers Bobby a job working construction with him, Bobby turns him down, too.

Pride? Stubbornness? Stupidity?

Incidentally, Kevin Costner plays Maggie’s brother, and his phony Boston accent doesn’t help the suspension of disbelief any.

We follow other company men who get laid off, including Phil Woodward, played by Chris Cooper, whose wife won’t let him come home until after six o’clock every day, because she doesn’t want the neighbors to know that he lost his job. He even has to carry his briefcase with him.

This might sound like a real downer of a movie, and it is until toward the end, when it becomes quite heartwarming.

THE COMPANY MEN is devastating, yet heartwarming.

I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”