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Wednesday, Nov. 04, 2009

'Goats' is out there, but never quite over the top

George Clooney lets his freak flag fly in the subdued 'Men Who Stare at Goats.'


ANIMAL BEHAVIOR: George Clooney stars as a "psychic" soldier in The Men Who Stare at Goats.  
 Overture Films/Lauar Macgruder

Overture Films/Lauar Macgruder

ANIMAL BEHAVIOR: George Clooney stars as a "psychic" soldier in The Men Who Stare at Goats. Overture Films/Lauar Macgruder

The Men Who Stare at Goats

***

R (strong language, drug content, brief nudity); 93 min.

"Wacky" isn’t George Clooney’s strong suit as an actor. But it’s at least amusing to watch the suave leading man let his freak flag fly.

It flutters and flaps in The Men Who Stare at Goats, an odder-than-odd farce about a small-town reporter (Ewan McGregor) who stumbles across the graduates of an Army "psychic" soldier program, self-described "Jedi Warriors" taught to fly, walk through walls, and practice mind control and "cloud bursting" — concentrating on a cloud until it breaks up, then taking the credit for it.

And goat staring? That’s where these "remote viewing" psychics glare at a hapless farm animal until its heart stops.

Bob Wilton (McGregor) is incredulous when he hears of this unit, even more so when he stumbles across its most famous member, Lyn Cassady (Clooney). Lyn, who goes by Skip, reluctantly regales Bob with tales of the glorious "Jedi" Bill Django (Jeff Bridges), whose battlefield epiphany in Vietnam sent him on a spirit quest that led to founding this New Age "New Earth Army."

As Bob and Skip stumble into Iraq in the opening days of the war, Skip employs his training with daft conviction and Bob’s jaw drops further by the minute as they have accidents, endure kidnapping and run-ins with Skip’s New Earth Army nemesis (Kevin Spacey in Evil/Smart Kevin Spacey mode).

This movie from Clooney crony Grant Heslov (he scripted Good Night, and Good Luck) struggles to be as giddy as its irreverent story and screwball characters promise. The laugh-out-loud moments and nutty characters (Bridges is perfect) strain to find each other.


— Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel

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