Monday, October 29, 2007

"Michael Clayton": An End to Suffering

(NOTE: You might not want to read this if you haven't yet seen the movie, and plan to. I don't think I give away much, but just in case...)

It's dawn. Three horses on a hillside, powerful, serene, majestic. They are connected with their natural environment, at peace with their own nature... Behind the man who stands there, gazing at them, down at the bottom of the hill, his expensive black Mercedes explodes in a burst of searing flame. Explodes again.

He was supposed to be inside it.

This is Michael Clayton's moment of truth, in the film whose title is appropriately his name. It's the moment that he glimpses an end to his own suffering. And suffer he does. His life has gone awry, his moral compass long since lost. Separated from wife and family, awash in gambling debts, he has surrendered his career as a lawyer to acting as the "janitor" to his corporate law firm, doing whatever it takes to clean up those inconvenient messes that threaten the firm's image--or that of its clients. He has learned to skillfully manipulate the truth to serve the corporate interest.

From that start on the hillside, we are led back through the last four days that have brought him to this epiphany. He has been assigned the task of bringing back a partner, Arthur (wonderfully portrayed by that fine actor, Tom Wilkinson) who is also an old friend and colleague, into the fold of corporate contingency. Arthur has lost his senses--or, as we discover, found them. Building the defense of a corporate client desperate to save itself from the public exposure of its egregious poisoning of hundreds of its consumers--and potentially millions more--Arthur has done the unthinkable, switching his alliegeance from the client to its victims. A traitor to the firm and to its bottom-line "values," this miscreant must be brought back in line, and Michael Clayton is the man relied upon to do it.

Along the road, however, Clayton is brought face to face with the venality of the system that he serves. Increasingly, he comes to realize that real justice is on the side of the plaintiff in the case in question, and that his friend is far from the lunatic he has been made out to be. When Clayton's counterparts, the "janitors" who represent his firm's corporate client, spring into action and resort, finally, to murder, he turns coat himself, sacrificing his own interest and that of his firm to the revelation of the truth.

Before I get lost in the complexities of this finely-conceived, finely-written, and magnificently enacted story, let me get back to redemption--for that, as I see it, is the story's theme. If Arthur forsakes the "meds" that have kept his life in balance and descends into a fit of madness that reveals itself as moral clarity, Michael's redemption is the greater struggle, because it involves the surrender of everything that has seemed important to him: money, status, the respect and trust of those he works for, his employment--and finally his very identity--in order to emerge from the hell he has created for himself. In a remarkable feat of acting, as the film comes to its close, George Clooney's face alone conveys the transformation from misery and desperation to a kind of happiness.

"Michael Clayton" kept me on the proverbial edge of my seat from beginning to end. It's the kind of film where you're never allowed to pause and glance nervously at your watch. It's a true thriller, but one where violence is reduced to the necessary minimum and where the characters and the complexity of their moral issues drive the action. It's tough, uncompromising, but not lacking in tender moments, and it grabs you where good art is supposed to grab you--round he heart. Clooney's Michael is at once strong and vulnerable, scared and angry, transparent and inscrutable. We can forgive him for having lost his way, because we share his human failings, his desires, his attachments. It's when he learns to let go of them--in good Buddhist fashion--that he finds the beginnings of his freedom.

The other part of the Buddhist lesson of this film, by the way, is the karmic teaching: that cruel, unskillful actions lead inevitably to unhealthy and undesirable outcomes, while skillful action brings about the results that satisfy the soul.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

P: Heard an interview with Sir Anthony Hopkins the other night about his film, Slipstream, written, directed and the music all done by him. Done like a dream apparently. Haven't seen yet.

Anonymous said...

P: The angle on behavior called "skillful" is interesting, manipulative, but interesting. I mean, an innocent person has no need for skill. The iChing, being a mathematical system, for instance, has 64,247 situations of wise advice. Would you do a piece listing five skillful behaviors for us please, in the typical style, perhaps just a sampling from your source? I am very curious how the advice is presented in English. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Oh, and how many skillful behaviours are there? Thanks.

Peter Clothier said...

Carly: manana... (Not sure how to put that tilde on the "n"! I mean, tomorrow. Cheers, P

Anonymous said...

P: The hard questions. I am trying to understand why Christians and others are joining this religion, I mean, besides the disillusionment with their parents faiths. Because if one is unhappy with say, the hypocrisy of his Christian friends and relatives, why not just practice the moral system only? The Proverbs are the backbone of an excellent moral system, for example.

In part, it must be that they don't believe in gods, but is that the whole reason for dumping the teachings in favor of something so foreign as an Asian version of morality? And Buddhism has a god, gods I should say, so that can't be it. So many seem to be fashioning their own religion that emphasizes some aspects of Buddhism and not others. I've noticed that very few Americans, if any, are interested at all in the metaphysics of Buddhism, or even know what it is. Many people admire Buddhism but don't know it is atheistic. Isn't there a kind of superficiality in that, the way Americans do most things; in a trendy superficial way? Is it labels they're after here? The branding of ideas? Now that would be consistent.

Are the skillful behaviors simply based on principles of peaceful co-existence? The way I hear it being referenced, it seems so.

If not, what is so compelling, unique, or fascinating about the skillful behaviors? Other than they seem to be something people already know, familiar, like the Proverbs, but in an other worldly exotic context? Is that what makes them pay more attention than they did to western codes of community and co-existence, which when done with integrity, are just as good, really? Is that what makes them seem new and better? What's the real appeal here?

Or is it, they just have had it and don't want anything at all to do with western wisdom, period, throwing the baby out with the bathwater?

And for anyone else reading, Peter knows I am not nor have ever been a Christian - for completely different reasons.

Peter Clothier said...

Carly, see my entry for today, Wednesday. What's attractive about Buddhism for me is not merely the underlying philosophy--though that fits in very well with my sense of being in the world and my relationship with others; nor the lure of a-theism; but the PRACTICE. It's a way to live my life, as I believe the Tao is for you.