Burn After Reading shows lighter side of Coen Brothers
Sara Carr
Issue date: 9/16/08 Section: Arts & Society
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Boasting a cast of A-list actors and frequent collaborators including George Clooney, Frances McDormand, John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton and Brad Pitt, Burn After Reading is a highbrow spoof on the spy genre as well as the current state of American values.
It's a return to form for the directors whose past comedic ventures included cult classics O, Brother Where Art Thou?, The Big Lebowski, and the North Dakota-set crime drama peppered with comedic undertones, Fargo. Its great thing to see for any fan of their previous work that they didn't leave behind their funny side altogether.
Burn After Reading chronicles the life of Osborne Cox (John Malkovich), a recent dropout of the C.I.A. with a drinking problem and half-baked plan to write a memoir of his life. The embittered veteran is left to wallow in his failures as his wife is more and more hostile towards him as the film bears on.
His wife Katie (Tilda Swinton, Michael Clayton) is already planning on leaving her husband for her longtime lover, D.C. philanderer Harry Pfarrer (George Clooney). Pfarrer, a married Federal Marshall with an eccentric hobby for lackluster inventions and a penchant for picking up women, loves sex, jogging and meandering his way through life with a completely aloof sensibility.
Among the women he has romanced is Linda Litzke (Frances McDormand), a middle-aged Hardbodies Fitness Centers employee, desperate for several plastic surgeries and for a long-term life partner via the endless subpar options on the various dating sites she is a part of.
Her world is turned upside down when a CD copy of Osborne Cox's memoirs are found on the floor in the women's locker room by her coworker and dim-witted friend Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt).
Chad, a muscleman trainer with an IQ lower than a toddler's, decides to team up with Linda to extort money from Osborne for his "highly classified" information and thus sparking an interlocking web of violence, intrigue and folly on the streets of the nation's capital.


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movie buff
posted 9/20/08 @ 3:08 PM EST
Brad Pitt can be so funny, as long as he's not taking himself too seriously... in any case, it's about time someone made good use of his habitually spastic arm movements
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