The Denver Post

With Tom Wilkinson, a time bomb or a warm hug?

- By Alissa Wilkinson

It takes 27 minutes for Tom Wilkinson to actually show up in “Michael Clayton,” but his specter haunts every second.

The movie opens with his voice on a recording, pleading in familiar terms with “Michael” — we find out later he’s a fixer at the law firm where Wilkinson’s character is a partner. “I’m begging you, Michael, I’m begging you, try to make believe this is not just madness, because this is not just madness,” the voice pleads, pitch modulating and then oscillatin­g through steadiness to vexation. He launches into a story about leaving a building to find himself coated in “amniotic, embryonic f luid,” then coming to a “stunning moment of clarity” about his work as a litigator who’s poured years of his life into, well, we don’t know yet, but it must be bad.

Tony Gilroy’s screenplay gives Wilkinson a lot to work with, but it’s his performanc­e that grabs you by the throat, all the more gripping because we don’t really know what’s going on. Who is this man? Is he aware of what he’s saying, or have his marbles gone skittering across the room and into every corner? Is anything he says true, and if it is, does he know it? Those questions hover over the movie, the tension stretching drumtight before Wilkinson even appears. George Clooney is the star of “Michael Clayton,” but its beating heart lies with Wilkinson, this imploding man on the phone.

Wilkinson (no relation, although publicists used to ask me), who died Saturday at 75, is one of those actors everyone knows even if they can’t quite place him.

The instrument­s Wilkinson had to work with — his look, his stature, his voice — weren’t particular­ly remarkable on their own.

His face, which began to verge on the cherubic as he aged, was that of an ordinary Englishman, someone you’d bump into in a pub. His voice wasn’t particular­ly rumbly or low-pitched, and although he stood much taller than many men he acted with, you’d never stare as he walked down the street. Wilkinson looked, in essence, like someone’s granddad, a man who would slip you a cough drop midmeeting and wink.

Yet, his roles I remember most involved an element of danger so thoroughly fused into that exterior that I spent the whole movie wondering whether this guy was a warm hug or a time bomb. In Michel Gondry’s “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” Wilkinson has a minor role as the doctor overseeing the memory-erasing procedure that Jim Carrey’s lovelorn Joel desperatel­y seeks. Kirsten Dunst plays Mary, the much-younger assistant who falls in love with the doctor. When he tries to explain that the two of them have a history already, there’s equal parts patheticne­ss and pathos in his performanc­e. Is he predator, prey or helplessly uncertain how his own work really affects people? He’s not sure, and neither are we.

The greatest encapsulat­ion of this ability, however, still lies in “Michael Clayton,” with the role of attorney Arthur Edens (for which he was Oscar-nominated) perfectly tuned for Wilkinson’s abilities. When his monologue ends, we’re pretty sure the man on the phone needs immediate psychiatri­c help. But he’s gone, suddenly, and when he pops up again, that assumption gets murky. Maybe this guy really has had a blinding moment of insight, a sudden attack of moral clarity. Or maybe not? Edens, it emerges, has bipolar disorder and is typically medicated, and Wilkinson plays this as a man whose mind keeps slipping sideways inside his skull.

The effect on the audience is absolutely electric. In one scene, Edens knocks on a window to say hello to Clayton, a sweet smile on his face — surely this guy just needs a nap. In another, just after he seemed moderately lucid, he’s curled in bed, all but rocking back and forth as he talks to a child on the phone about the kid’s favorite fantasy book, seeming desperate to understand. Other people don’t know what to do with him either; a plaintiff seems to harbor both affection for and fear of him, and we get it. He seems equally likely to fly off the handle or offer a cup of tea. “You are a manic depressive,” Clayton says to him, by way of dismissing what seems like an attack of conscience not befitting a legendary litigator. “I am Shiva, the god of death,” Wilkinson replies, no histrionic­s, just a flat statement of fact. It makes your toes curl.

The most chilling scene in “Michael Clayton” comes straight out of the blue, a perfect showcase for Wilkinson’s ability to ride the edge. Clayton is driving the streets of Manhattan to find Edens, who has gone missing. He spots him walking down an alleyway with a comically giant bag of baguettes, and Edens, delighted to see him, offers him one. His face is childlike and open, vulnerable and generous. We’re almost afraid this man will get mugged for his bread.

Then Clooney starts talking about committing Edens to an institutio­n, and suddenly a glint appears in Wilkinson’s eye. “Michael,” he says, in a voice that sounds very different from the one on the recording, “I have great affection for you, and you lead a very rich and interestin­g life.” This does not seem like a compliment. “But you’re a bag man, not an attorney,” he continues, in a tone of perfect lucidity. Suddenly we’re seeing Edens, the courtroom killer, exactly the lawyer you’d choose to defend a giant corporatio­n in a multibilli­on- dollar class action suit. He is about to rip out Clayton’s guts.

Calmly, Edens goes on to explain why Clayton’s approach to getting Edens into an institutio­n — the better to control the situation — is completely wrongheade­d, given the laws about these things in New York. Everything he has done is a mistake, and Clayton knows it because Edens knows it.

“Well, good luck and God bless,” he concludes. “But I’ll tell you this: the last place you want to see me is in court.” And we, at least for that moment, believe him.

 ?? SONY PICTURES ?? Tom Wilkinson stars as a priest convinced he performed real exorcisms in “The Exorcism of Emily Rose.”
SONY PICTURES Tom Wilkinson stars as a priest convinced he performed real exorcisms in “The Exorcism of Emily Rose.”
 ?? HBO ?? Tom Wilkinson and Jessica Lange star in HBO’S poignant but unusual love story, “Normal.”
HBO Tom Wilkinson and Jessica Lange star in HBO’S poignant but unusual love story, “Normal.”

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