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Brad Pitt is hilarious as Chad, a fitness instructor at a DC-area gym who gets his hands on what he thinks is a top-secret disk. He and his coworker Linda (a hysterically funny Frances McDormand) try to squeeze a little money out of the disk’s owner, a recently fired CIA agent named Osborne Cox (a fiercely fantastic John Malkovich). Cox had saved his unintelligible “memwas” (memoirs) onto the disk as a way to stick it to The Agency, but he’s in no mood to bargain with the inept extortionists.
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Cox's starchy wife, played marvelously by Tilda Swinton, is having an affair with a married FBI agent/inventor played with gleeful gaucheness by George Clooney. Richard Jenkins plays the gym manager who’s smitten with Linda, while J.K. Simmons perfectly captures an exasperated yet God-like CIA chief who gets regular updates on who’s doing what to whom. Numerous plot threads intersect as Linda meets Clooney’s philandering wannabe playboy online and starts a relationship with him, Osborne Cox meets his blackmailers and someone is always spying on someone else.
I loved this film, so much more than other Coen “favorites” like The Big Lebowski. McDormand in particular mines an amazing amount of depth out of her superficial character, a woman obsessed with plastic surgery as a way to “reinvent” herself. Pitt hasn’t been this original and good since Twelve Monkeys, while Clooney, Swinton and Malkovich are a joy to watch. It’s great to see that the Coen Brothers still have their comic touch, and I eagerly look forward to the next of their geographically centered comedies.
UPDATE: Burn After Reading is now available on DVD and Blu-ray
Review by Neil Cohen, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and Phoenix's Echo Magazine.
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