The Accountant is
a stupid movie dressed up like a smart one. At its core the picture is pure
preposterous pulp. Ben Affleck plays a brilliant autistic accountant whose
globetrotting financial consulting for black market crime lords and other shady
types makes him a man who knew too much. The film follows him into a
cat-and-mouse game with hitmen hired to eliminate him and the federal agents
hot on his trail. That’s absurd, but the filmmakers have taken it very
seriously. Director Gavin O’Connor (Miracle)
and screenwriter Bill Dubuque (The Judge)
layer in tragic backstory, piling up childhood bullying, stern fathers, absent
mothers, jail stints, and more building a picture of the accountant as a sad
figure. His autism is treated as both a superpower and an embellishment of his
sadness derived from an inability to connect. He lives a lonely lifestyle,
moving from identity to identity, dragging his laundered life savings in a
pristine Airstream trailer. We’re supposed to see the dim, pale Seamus McGarvey
cinematography and the ridiculously overqualified supporting cast and find the
whole thing profound. And yet, for whatever glimmers of insight and import it
has, the only developments it can think of are loud, tedious exchanges of
gunfire.
At least the cast tries its hardest to pull off the
silliness with the actors providing their best grave expressions and deadpan
exposition tones. Anna Kendrick plays a plucky junior accountant who discovers
a problem in the books of a wealthy robotics CEO (John Lithgow). Jon Bernthal leads
a team of mercenaries who travel the world looking to take out loose ends for
anyone who can afford to pay the bills for what’s clearly a well-funded
mini-army. J.K. Simmons and Cynthia Addai-Robinson are agents who sit in
offices explaining their research to each other before finally getting out in
the field, where Simmons promptly sits down and talks us through a lengthy
info-dump. (At least they’ve found a new setting.) These are all talented
performers, and sometimes it’s worth admiring how much the greats can do when
given so little on the page to play. They – and Jean Smart, and Jeffrey Tambor,
and Robert C. Treveiler, and Alison Wright, and the rest – spend their screen time
here acting like the premise is believable. Because they’re invested in the
reality of a story that begins with an accountant-turned-criminal mastermind
and ends with a few wild twists and a shoot-‘em-up like something out of Jack Reacher or John Wick, it almost works.
There are sequences where the movie wears its grim
self-importance lightly, allowing little quips and small acknowledgement of its
exaggerated qualities – like Affleck’s long-range target practice observed by a
shocked farmer – to show it’s in on the joke. A movie about a super-accountant
has to know it’s attempting something a little off the beaten path, even if
it’s trying to shove it into the usual mid-budget Warner Brothers’ crime
picture mold. But the trouble comes when the movie presents its very earnest, hugely
clumsy, ideas about autism. It’d be free to be sillier, pulpier, and
drastically more satisfying if it weren’t for incongruous message movie
aspirations. Its opening scene is a tearful one with concerned parents trying
to get help in the wake of a diagnosis. Its final moments are of would-be
inspirational autism acceptance sentiment. But, in between, Affleck’s accountant
is a collection of ticks and cutesy affectations meant to signify his
challenges at every turn. This is all well and good in theory, but it’s
sloppily integrated, used for comedy of the haha-he’s-unusual kind and to drive
the plot as convenient explanation for his superpowers of cognition.
Part of the problem is the difficulty in believing Affleck
as an accountant capable of, say, comprehending and analyzing fifteen years
worth of corporate ledgers over night. If he was the type of performer who
projected deep reservoirs of unspoken intelligence, maybe the film wouldn’t
have to hit his ticks so hard. That wouldn’t solve the fundamental
miscalculation of wedging a well-intentioned message into a totally frivolous
affair, but would at least make it fit a smidge better. Affleck, despite clear
hardworking smarts in interviews and behind the camera, simply isn’t good at
looking like the smartest guy in the room on screen. He’s always at his best
playing average guys bumping up against the limits of their wits – Gone Girl, To the Wonder, Extract, Shakespeare in Love, Armageddon. Here he’s playing at virtuoso
skills, trying hard to make sense of a character written symptoms out instead
of inside in attempt to write a person who happens to have a particular
perspective. It’s just not playing to his strengths. In that way it’s a mirror
of the movie as a whole. It wants to be something it’s not, resisting its most appealing
goofiest impulses every step of the way.
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