(15)
Having won an impressive collection of Oscars, including Best Direction, Best Screenplay and Best Picture for their mesmerising amoral thriller No Country for Old Men, Joel and Ethan Coen return to comedy. It is a genre they are very comfortable with, having produced such classics as Raising Arizona, Fargo and O Brother, Where Art Thou?
However, this well-cast but self-indulgently scripted screwball comedy thriller does not get anywhere near their previous successes. Burn After Reading is very much a minor comic work in the Coen oeuvre, although certainly better (it would be difficult not to be) than The Ladykillers and the intolerable Coen-scripted Intolerable Cruelty.
The increasingly frenetic goings-on begin with analyst Osborne Cox (overplayed by John Malkovich) being dismissed from his job with the CIA ("Whose ass didn't I kiss?" he asks bitterly). He returns to his Washington home to drink, write his memoirs and bicker with his frosty wife Katie (Tilda Swinton), who is planning to leave Osborne for married Federal marshal Harry Pfarrer (George Clooney).