Genre: Comedy/Drama
Director: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: Matt Damon, Scott Bakula, Joel McHale,
Melanie Lynskey, Patton Oswalt, Clancy Brown
RunTime: 1 hr 48 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: NC-16 (Some Coarse Language)
Official Website: http://theinformantmovie.warnerbros.com/
Opening Day: 19 November 2009
Synopsis:
What was Mark Whitacre thinking? A rising star at agri-industry
giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Whitacre suddenly turns
whistleblower. Even as he exposes his company's multi-national
price-fixing conspiracy to the FBI, Whitacre envisions himself
being hailed as a hero of the common man and handed a promotion.
But before all that can happen, the FBI needs evidence, so
Whitacre eagerly agrees to wear a wire and carry a hidden
tape recorder in his briefcase, imagining himself as a kind
of de facto secret agent. Unfortunately for the FBI, their
lead witness hasn't been quite so forthcoming about helping
himself to the corporate coffers. Whitacre's ever-changing
account frustrates the agents and threatens the case against
ADM as it becomes almost impossible to decipher what is real
and what is the product of Whitacre's rambling imagination.
Based on the true story of the highest-ranking corporate whistleblower
in U.S. history.
Movie Review:
Steven Soderbergh’s film is based on a true story about
a whistle-blower, but it’s quite unlike the similarly-themed
Michael Mann film “The Insider”. In fact, that
faux-jaunty emphasis of an exclamation mark at the end of
its title would probably have given you a hint that “The
Informant!” is really more comedy than drama, more akin
to Soderbergh’s “Ocean’s Eleven, Twelve
and Thirteen” than say “Traffic”.
Why
Soderbergh has chosen to give the story of Mark Whitacre-
the highest-ranking executive in U.S. history to blow the
whistle in a case of corporate price-fixing- a light frothy
treatment is not quite intuitive. Indeed, the story of the
man who ended up being discovered for a US$9 million embezzlement
could have easily been told as a psychological drama, but
instead Soderbergh has made this a deadly serious comedy,
complete with an exuberant score by Marvin Hamlisch.
Whitacre
was a biochemist and executive at Archer Daniels Midland who
over the course of five years supplied the Federal Bureau
of Investigation with hundreds of tapes that implicated his
company in a global price-fixing scam. Then just when the
FBI thought they had a solid case, A.D.M. discovered details
of Whitacre’s embezzlement that not only threw the case
into disarray, but uncovered the bizarre nature of a man who
you never knew whether was telling the truth right from the
beginning.
As
all manner of deceit goes, it only takes one small lie to
weave an ever more tangled web- and so it is with Whitacre,
covering up one lie with another and pretty soon not remembering
which lie he had told to whom. Meanwhile, Whitacre enjoys
the attention he is getting, quite proudly calling himself
Agent 0014 (because he’s “twice as smart as James
Bond”) and rather foolishly revealing his secret identity
to some of his colleagues.
Soderbergh
is well aware of the absurdity of the tale and not once does
he let us forget it. In between relating Whitacre’s
spiral of deceit, Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns
(“The Bourne Ultimatum”) clue us in to just what
is going inside that head of Whitacre’s through a continuous
series of voiceovers mostly unrelated to what is going on
around him. But their peculiarities- ties, polar bears, and
butterflies- tell us a lot about Whitacre and reveal him as
the atypical individual with more up his sleeve than he cares
to show.
With
such an interestingly drawn character, it’s no wonder
then that Matt Damon had gamely piled on 30 pounds, donned
a rug and put on a fake nose to play Whitacre. Damon’s
performance here is pitch-perfect, no doubt one of the best
of his career, as he embodies the Everyman with an understated
charm and beguiling wit. Here is a man who on all counts was
smarter than many, if not most, around him and Damon captures
the poise of this confident yet deluded man deftly.
And
while Soderbergh’s jolly style may take a while to get
used to given the very serious nature of his subject matter
(yes, it’s corporate malfeasance!), it is the film’s
subject that is the real interest here. Once you realise that,
you’d find his satirical style well suited for the tattle-tale
of Mark Whitacre- based on a true story no less. Were it not,
one would quickly dismiss it as hokey nonsense, but “The
Informant!” is as real as it gets and quite deserving
of that extra punctuation at the back. Imagine that!
Movie Rating:
(Have you heard? This tattle of a tale is… Highly
entertaining!)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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