The Counselor promises much in all departments, but perhaps most exciting amongst its
talent is the debut of Cormac McCarthy as a screenwriter. McCarthy is one of
America’s most talented working writers and his novels have been adapted fairly
frequently with varying levels of success. From All The Pretty Horses (2000) to the excellent No Country For Old Men (2007). McCarthy has a way with language
that is superbly symbolic and creates stark, violent worlds of immense beauty. The Counselor is his first work that has
bypassed the novel form and gone direct to screenplay.
Whether The Counselor worked on the page or
whether it has been edited and McCarthy’s vision has been lost is unknown, but
what is known is that on screen it does not work. The characters are enigmatic
to the point of frustration as is the narrative. At no point is it clear what
is going on. And not in a good way, where we are guessing the fate of the
characters, but in a bad way, where boredom sets in. What is worse is that
McCarthy’s dialogue comes across as hackneyed and sends us running back and craving
the creativity of The Road, published
in 2006. This simply feels misjudged in all areas and is better glossed over
for the careers of all involved.