![]() It's the only moment when "Unfinished Business" feels in any way original. Because he can't find a hotel room, Trunkman ends up staying in a museum art-installation called AMERICAN BUSINESSMAN 42: an all-white hotel room, with an entire wall of windows, where passersby can look in and watch him as though he is an elephant in a zoo. ![]() There's one sequence in "Unfinished Business" that is not given enough room to breathe, but it has a lot of weird possibilities. Mike Pancake is so naive that he doesn't know the difference between a square and a rectangle. Trunkman has two unhappy kids at home, one who is being bullied, and one who is a bully, as well as a wife who cannot grasp that her husband is on an international business trip and she shouldn't call him three times a day. in a tone-deaf repetition that almost reaches surreal levels. Trunkman is determined to close some important deal, and that journey takes them first to Portland, Maine, and then to Germany (although why all three of them had to travel overseas remains obscure, especially since their "company" has no money in the bank).Įlderly sad-dog Tim is unhappy in his marriage, wants a divorce, and his main desire in life is try the "wheelbarrow position." It's hard to invest in a "stake" such as that one, and the "wheelbarrow position," unfunny at its first mention, is brought up again. ![]() There's no chemistry between these guys, despite a valiant effort on the part of the actors (especially Vaughn, always open to possibilities in any given scene for comedy/bits/gags). Instead, he acquires his first "employees" in the parking lot on the way to his car: Timothy ( Tom Wilkinson), fired because he was too old, and Mike Pancake ( Dave Franco), who just interviewed for a job and didn't get it, maybe because he has only about 20 words in his vocabulary.Ī year then passes, and the three are seen still working out of the product-placement-Dunkin-Donuts as an office, and their relationship has not progressed at all. When Trunkman storms out, declaring he will set up a business of his own, nobody follows him. Employees implausibly gather around to watch the argument. Dan Trunkman (Vaughn) confronts his boss, the unfeeling and cutthroat Chuck Portnoy ( Sienna Miller), about why he has to submit to a 5-percent pay cut. The opening scene, meant to call up memories of Jerry Maguire storming out of his office taking the brave little secretary with him, is a problem because as one watches it, one starts to wish that one were watching " Jerry Maguire" instead.
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