'Hail, Caesar!' Movie Review

The George Clooney film is now in theaters.

Rated PG-13

Three out of five stars

It’s not going to work for everyone, but there’s a lot here to like.

When it comes to the Coen Brothers, I’m like a drug addict, chasing the high I felt the first time I saw "Fargo," or "Raising Arizona" or "The Big Lebowski." I go into each film hoping for a repeat experience, but it seems more often than not lately, I don’t quite get the buzz I’m looking for. The pieces are there but it never quite comes together for me.

I felt like that during a lot of "Hail, Caesar!"

The film follows Josh Brolin’s character, Eddie Mannix, a powerful “fixer” for the fictitious movie studio Capitol Pictures in the 1950s. It’s Mannix’s job to go around squashing gossip, paying off blackmailers, and putting out various other fires. He’s a conflicted guy -- sometimes what he has to do isn’t always ethical, and he spends a lot of time at confession. Then Capitol’s biggest star, Baird Whitlock (George Clooney) is kidnapped for ransom from the set of their latest film epic – also titled "Hail, Caesar!" – and it’s up to Mannix to get him back.

What gets a lot more screen time, and slows down the film, is a subplot about communism that really seemed to drag. If the Coen brothers were trying to make any point in the film, it felt as if it was in those scenes. I know there was commentary there and throughout the film -- on fame and celebrity, corporate control of art and similar broader themes -- but I couldn’t really seem to process it. Maybe the dialogue was just too thick, or I just wasn’t in the mood to think so hard, but a lot of the film seemed to go over my head.

And I don’t think I was alone. After my screening ended, in a packed theater, there was complete silence. No clapping, no laughing, not even the sound of people turning to their seat mates and wondering what just happened. It was the silence of a more than a hundred people trying to process what they’d just seen. If they’re anything like me, they’re still trying to figure it out.

You know that old quote that goes “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts?” "Hail, Caesar!" is a bunch of great parts that don’t seem to make a great whole.