Advertising_info
Logo
Milwaukee's Daily Magazine Friday, Dec. 5, 2008
Today
Hi: 21
Lo: 19
Sat
Hi: 30
Lo: 11
Sun
Hi: 25
Lo: 16
Burn After Reading
Opens Sept. 12, 2008. Run time: 1 hr. 37 min.

for pervasive language, some sexual content and violence

At the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency in Arlington, Va., analyst Osborne Cox arrives for a top-secret meeting. Unfortunately for Cox, the secret is soon out: he is being ousted. Cox does not take the news particularly well and returns to his Georgetown home to work on his memoirs and his drinking, not necessarily in that order. His wife Katie is dismayed, though not particularly surprised; she is already well into an illicit affair with Harry Pfarrer, a married federal marshal, and sets about making plans to leave Cox for Harry.

Elsewhere in the Washington, D.C., suburbs, and seemingly worlds apart, Hardbodies Fitness Centers employee Linda Litzke can barely concentrate on her work. She is consumed with her life plan for extensive cosmetic surgery, and confides her mission to can-do colleague Chad Feldheimer. Linda is all but oblivious to the fact that the gym's manager Ted Treffon pines for her even as she arranges dates via the Internet with other men.

When a computer disc containing material for the CIA analyst's memoirs accidentally falls into the hands of Linda and Chad, the duo are intent on exploiting their find. As Ted frets, "No good can come of this," events spiral out of everyone's and anyone's control, in a cascading series of darkly hilarious encounters.




OnMilwaukee.com rating:

Cast: George Clooney, John Malkovich, Frances McDormand, Brad Pitt, Tilda Swinton
Director: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Written by: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Producer: Tim Bevan, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Eric Fellner
Genres: Comedy, Drama

Movies
Coens let laughter loose with "Burn After Reading"
By Julie Lawrence - Sept. 13, 2008 5:15 a.m.
"Burn" is a black comedy about, for all intents and purposes, an ill-fated collision of otherwise unassociated idiots and while the cast does demonstrate the downfalls of their flaws with brilliant and hilarious exaggeration, you can't help but cringe, continuously, at their quirky caricatures. ...



View upcoming dates:
Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday

Currently we do not have any available information about showtimes for 12/05/2008.



No user reviews for this movie.
Post your review now

Critic review:

Burn After Reading is that rare satirical thriller--a devilish, delicious, diabolically dark, irreverent and insanely funny movie that could only have come from the minds of Joel and Ethan Coen. Story Following on the heels of the deep cynicism of their Oscar winning, No Country for Old Men, the Coen brothers have crafted an original screenplay that falls back on the kind of human satire they have exploited so well in past efforts like Fargo and The Big Lebowski. This screwball comedy with a sharp, cutting edge includes: an ex-CIA analyst Osborne Cox (John Malkovich), who has just been fired; a couple of Washington D.C. gym trainers Chad Feldheimer (Brad Pitt) and Linda Litzke (Frances McDormand); a womanizing Federal Marshall named Harry Pfarrer (George Clooney); and assorted other nutcases, who all collide when a lost computer disc with supposedly top secret material winds up in the wrong hands.

After the depressed and alcoholic Cox is axed from his CIA job, he retreats to his home to start working on his memoirs, while his wife Katie (Tilda Swinton) is secretly having an affair with the married Harry. Meanwhile, Linda and Chad find they have stumbled on to Cox's lost CIA disc and set about to making this find worth their while. Suffice to say the complications and character mix-ups just keep piling up as the Coens' story plunges into the darker side of human nature. Acting This dream cast is to die for. Clooney and Pitt don't get to share many scenes, a la their Oceans films, but both go for the jugular and get big laughs playing rather dumb.

Pitt, in particular, hits just the right notes as a dopey fitness trainer, who stumbles onto what he thinks is the equivalent of buried treasure. Leaning on deft physical comedy he excels as the looney Chad. Clooney also has some prize moments, including one of pure hysteria opposite his buddy Brad's Chad. McDormand as usual is sublimely amusing as Linda, a woman who is obsessed with her plans to get massive plastic surgery, while at the same time trying to find the right man in a series of Internet dates. As Ted, the gym manager with a secret crush on Linda, Richard Jenkins (The Visitor) continues his amazing run this year ably capturing the cautious Ted, who warns his pair of employees repeatedly that they are asking for big trouble.

Last year's supporting Oscar winner for Michael Clayton, the enormously talented Tilda Swinton is back opposite Clooney in a very different way, hopping into bed in an illicit affair that shows off the Clayton duo in surprising ways. Malkovich is outrageous, threatening and takes his high-pitched performance way over the top--and is a lot of fun to watch. Special mention also to veteran actors David Rasche and J.K. Simmons as a pair of CIA operatives.

Direction The Coen Brothers have done it again, proving that when they are on their game, they may be the most daring and audacious directors since Stanley Kubrick. Certainly, they are as versatile, and if Burn After Reading doesn't hit the heights of a Dr. Strangelove level satire, it's a lot more than most filmmakers even want to attempt these days. Trying to balance alternating dark and screwball comedy and getting their superstar cast to play it all straight is no easy task, but it's one the Coens have pulled off here. This is a cinematic soufflé that could have imploded in lesser hands but the juggling of all the twists and turns these characters take is expertly handled.

Following up an awards magnet like No Country for Old Men, the brothers have wisely turned to the kind of quirky sideshow that turned their Big Lebowski into such a cult hit. Burn won't be for every taste, but it's well worth the ride for those who don't like their comedy pat and predictable. Bottom Line Hollywood.com rated this film 3 1/2 stars.-Pete Hammond.



Quality: High Medium Low
(Hint: higher quality videos look better in fullscreen)

061982h1

Movies and Theaters
- OR -

Movies home page




Reader poll
What's your favorite movie theater in Milwaukee?
The Oriental
The Ultra Screen
The Rosebud
The Fox Bay
Anywhere with stadium seating
Results after 7250 votes
Archived polls