CAST: Javier Bardem, Manolo Solo, Almudena Amor, Óscar de la Fuente, Sonia Almarcha, Fernando Albizu, Tarik Rmili, Rafa Castejón, Celso Bugallo, Francesc Orella, MartÃn Páez, Yaël Belicha, Mara Guil, Nao Albet, MarÃa de Nati
RUNNING TIME: 120 mins
CERTIFICATE: 15
BASICALLY…: A manipulative boss (Bardem) attempts to resolve his company’s many problems before an award committee arrives…
NOW FOR THE REVIEW…
Despite becoming a true international A-lister, it’s still nice to see Javier Bardem return to his roots in Spanish cinema every now and then, even when he perhaps has bigger and more productive things to do with his career. The actor is undoubtedly the biggest selling point of The Good Boss, a workplace satire that was put forward as Spain’s official entry for the most recent International Feature Film Oscar (it wasn’t nominated in the end), but Bardem’s magnetic presence isn’t the only thing holding this film together; it is a brutal, darkly funny, and occasionally heavy-handed farce that keeps you invested enough throughout its many amusing situations.
Billed as a dark satire of capitalism at its seediest, The Good Boss certainly hits most of the expected targets one would assume a movie like this would aim for. Themes such as greed, corruption, inequality, immorality et al are all touched upon here by writer-director Fernando León de Aranoa (who previously worked with Bardem on Mondays in the Sun and Escobar), often in ways which you might have seen before in other business satires from American Psycho to In the Company of Men, but are executed well enough here by the Spanish filmmaker to stay interesting despite the familiarity. That being said, de Aranoa tends to drill the point so far into the ground that most traces of subtlety are virtually absent, including a recurring scales metaphor to indicate balance in this anti-hero’s professional and personal life that is well and truly worn through by the end of the movie. It is a very straightforward movie, in the sense that you know exactly what it’s trying to say about the cutthroat nature of business and its many darker subsidies, without prodding too much further beneath the surface.
Bardem is worth the trip to the cinema alone, but the movie itself is an entertaining enough ride to further justify that visit, with the slyly fun tone neatly complimenting its lead actor’s fiercely committed presence. By no means does it rewrite the book on corporate satire, nor does it even say anything all that new about the corrupt malpractices of capitalist figures or the seething class and racial inequality from the bottom upwards, but The Good Boss is fairly comfortable with just being a good movie about a not-very-good boss.
SO, TO SUM UP…
The Good Boss is an entertaining corporate satire that benefits from a slyly playful tone and a hugely magnetic lead turn by Javier Bardem, although it wears its obvious targets on its sleeve and occasionally removes all subtlety in order to drill its central messages and metaphors unnecessarily deep into the ground.
Our coverage of this year’s BFI London Film Festival continues with our exclusive write-ups on some of the most buzzed titles from this year’s edition, including Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, It Was Just an Accident and others!
Our first collection of reviews from this year’s BFI London Film Festival includes write-ups on some of the most anticipated titles from this year’s edition, including Sirât, Left-Handed Girl and others!