Love, sex, drugs, money, murder, beheading, philosophy â the building blocks of life. Or, at least they are if weâre to believe Cormac McCarthy. The author has made a career out of graphic, difficult content that seems like it should be the stuff of pulp novels but instead becomes something much more thoughtful and contemplative. Perhaps he uses that to allow for even darker and more violent content, because itâs not trash if it makes you think. Itâs this kind of mentality that he applies to The Counselor, his first screenplay in almost 40 years, directed by Ridley Scott. Itâs a movie with dozens of brilliant component pieces that may or may not fit together, and is at once completely on the nose and wholly ambiguous. As a result, I still donât really know what I think of it.
The Counselor and 2007âs No Country for Old Men, which was based on a McCarthy novel of the same name, are very much of a piece. They both deal with arrogant men who get in over their heads when dealing with Mexican drug cartels, as well as about the nature of evil, choices, free will, chance, and inevitability. Unlike the Coen Brothersâ film, though, The Counselorâs characters feel very much like stereotypes, or at the very most are a series of traits and opinions that are held together only by the strength of the actors playing them. And the cast really is terrific. Mostly.
The titular character is played by Michael Fassbender. Throughout, his only name is âCounselorâ and in a lot of ways thatâs all he is. Heâs an attorney for some less than savory characters, not least of which is Reiner, played by Javier Bardem with yet another ridiculous hairstyle. The Counselor has decided to join Reiner on a business venture trafficking a huge quantity of heroin from Mexico to Chicago. Theyâre opening a bar together as a means of laundering the money. The third member of their little scheme is Reinerâs partner, Westray (Brad Pitt), a very careful and hence very confident man who doesnât spend time with Reiner anymore, given how reckless heâs gotten lately.
There are also two women involved in the story, representing two completely opposite ends of the feminine spectrum (in the eyes of movies). The first is the Counselorâs girlfriend, Laura (Penelope Cruz). Sheâs innocent, naïve, sweet, simple, and she and the Counselor are madly, irrevocably in love with each other. This is very important. The other woman is Malkina (Cameron Diaz), who is everything Laura is not. Like, the exact opposite, in fact. Malkina is hyper-sexual, incredibly devious, contemptible, vindictive, and heartless. She is Reinerâs live-in girlfriend whom he likes in theory, but is sort of too stuck in his ways to do anything about it.
This $28 million scheme of the boys begins to go south almost right away, because someone knows what theyâre up to and plans to hijack the shipment for their own purposes. When one of the people in the chain ends up decapitated and a vital piece of the equation is taken, it immediately gets back to the cartel that the Counselor put up the kidâs bail because his client (Rosie Perez) was his mother. Does that make sense? Seems circumstantial, but weâre told many times that the cartel doesnât care about the hows and whys of anything; if a deal goes south and they think something funnyâs going on, theyâll burn everybody. To the ground. Horrible, painful, inhuman ways of killing people will be dished out and there is next to nothing anyone can do about it. Basically, donât get involved with drug cartels.
The movie is split into two basic threads that cut back and forth, one being our main characters talking about the nature of love and sex and women and horrible, gut-wrenching murder and how clearly itâs going to happen. The other thread is following the truck with the drugs in it and the dominoes falling that eventually spell the implosion of the grand scheme and the necessity to run. Weâre never really told why things are happening or what exactly everything means, which is a staple of McCarthyâs work. At the same time, the leads all just sit around and talk about major themes in ways that nobody would ever really talk to each other.
The three lead men all represent different ways of dealing with their two main issues: women and money. Pittâs character is calculating and removed. He keeps his money hidden; everything is liquid and he has no earthly attachments. But, he still likes women, and possibly (itâs never elaborated on, go figure) that he may have had a thing with Diazâs character long ago and that led to the dissolution of his friendship with Bardem. Bardem, on the other hand, knows the business but is completely un-careful; he lives extravagantly, throws lavish parties, has two pet cheetahs, and lets Diaz do whatever she wants. Finally, we have Fassbender, who is completely out of his element, thinking he can play ball with the big boys, and has the biggest liability of all in the form of Cruz, who, again, he loves with his whole being.
Is any one of these men correct? The movie has a very definite opinion about that. In McCarthyâs terms, men can be gotten via their heart, their dick, or their wallet, and sometimes all three. Much as Anton Chigurh (Bardemâs character in No Country) represented the supremacy and unflinching callousness of the criminal underworld, a character here does as well, which I wonât spoil, but itâs much less focused. âThe Cartelâ essentially is the main representative of all the evil in humanity, and an evil that you or I in the civilized world couldnât possibly understand and should never hope to meet. No one is safe, especially the innocent.
Scottâs direction is good, as always, and he gives the movie enough flourish without overshadowing the (convoluted) story being told. Since so much of what transpires is represented visually, it has to be done in a way that makes it clear and yet also exciting. Iâm not sure it is as clear as it should be. Superficially I knew what was going on, but I continually felt like I was missing something huge. Whether thatâs a directorial flaw or itâs just a basic part of the script (McCarthy is the KING of subtext and subtlety), Iâm not entirely sure.
The cast is exceptional; Fassbender especially gives another truly wonderful performance. Diaz, however, is either doing Oscar-caliber work or sheâs the worst actor on planet Earth. I truly cannot tell. Some of her lines sound so affected and weird, but the character is kind of affected and weird, so I donât know if it was a choice or just something she couldnât help. I honestly do not know. There are also cameo appearances from a lot of recognizable actors, including Bruno Ganz, Natalie Dormer, and Dean Norris, all of whom bring something to the proceedings before drifting back into the ether.
So, if you canât guess already, I donât really know what I thought of The Counselor. On the one hand, itâs everything I could want in a crime movie; on the other hand, itâs so oblique and navel-gazy that I feel like the story was secondary to âideas.â I will say that I havenât been able to stop thinking about it since I saw it, and it has a few scenes that have disturbed and affected me more than any Iâve seen in quite some time, which is really saying something if I, the guy who loves gory horror movies, can get messed up by scenes of violence. But maybe thatâs good; maybe a movie that portrays violence in such a horrendous and gut-punching way is exactly what we need. Like McCarthy, Iâll think about it without being committal.
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