Score: 4 / 5
The rare biographical/historical movie more concerned with theme than with plot, Worth debuted on Netflix this month just in time for the twentieth anniversary of 9/11. I've rewatched movies about that terrible day recently, and I'm struck by how few actually dramatize the events of it; perhaps it would be in poor taste, or perhaps none of us who remember it want to relive it. United 93 and World Trade Center are perhaps the only ones that capture the reality of what happened. Others tend to use 9/11 as a touching stone, exploring what happened after in politics (The Report, Lions for Lambs), international war (Zero Dark Thirty, Redacted), or even on a personal level (Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close). Then there are those that try to recreate the sensations of that day on a metaphorical level (Cloverfield, and just about any disaster movie that involves skyscrapers collapsing). Worth belongs to the family of political aftermath, though its thematic questioning takes a slightly different track, all the more weighty as the last twenty years have caused much suffering for the surviving first responders.
As its title indicates, Worth questions the value of human life. Specifically, that's what its lawyers are trying to accomplish while setting up the 9/11 Victims' Compensation Fund, a congressionally mandated effort to help the families of those who died during the terrorist attacks. Michael Keaton and Amy Ryan play Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, respectively, the partnered lawyers selected to define the goals and functionality of the fund and then facilitate its rollout. Shortly after the early establishing scenes, which primarily introduce Feinberg as the practical, logically-minded numbers man, the government asks him to head up this sticky project. His cool rationality belies some relative enthusiasm in fulfilling what he sees as his duty, though he knows it will be a thankless task; he repeats his aim for "objectivity," removing emotional baggage from the proceedings. But it bears a hollow ring. After all, how do you set up a single formula -- one that is "fair" -- to ameliorate the losses of loved ones across the board?
Director Sara Colangelo and writer Max Borenstein work hard to demonstrate for us the complex nature of the protagonists' task. They constantly reference the different kinds of people directly affected: can you compare the worth of a CEO and a school child? A custodian to a lawyer, a pilot to a firefighter? The insurance companies certainly will try to contrast those price tags, to say nothing of grieving families. Speaking of which, what about single parents to multiple children, or gay lovers who were unable to marry, or primary providers to elderly or ill parents? The unbearable nuances of these vastly different situations all need to be explored and calculated before the fund's two-year deadline hits. Our filmmakers use a clever shorthand in building these questions and raising our awareness by splitting up the legal team and having them interview potential recipients of the fund.
It's a fascinating and moving film for many reasons, but its greatest strength lies in letting its starring cast -- which it balances very well -- take a backseat during the long middle section, focusing our attention on the interviews with victims' families and on their heartwrenching stories. And while these scenes get everything right on their own, they serve a dramatic purpose less humanitarian: they exist mostly to show the development of Feinberg's character from Mr. Scrooge-y Objectivity to an ex-Mr. Grinch whose heart has grown three times its size.
And then there's Stanley Tucci as Charles Wolf, the husband of a woman who died on 9/11, who plays a sort of popular populist arguing against the bureaucracy and red tape inherent in the fund's formula. His trope, a wise man on the fringe, acts as devil's advocate and mentor to Feinberg, but I wanted more understanding of him as a character. The film's deus ex machina is in fact delivered by Wolf, whose ultimate public approval of the fund got it to surpass its goal only in the eleventh hour. But the film skates over exactly why, turning it into a rather silly dramatic moment when Wolf meets with Feinberg and decides, quite arbitrarily, that he's a good person. It's a baffling misstep in a movie that gets so much right. Thankfully, though, it's not nearly enough to sink the ship, and Worth is more than worth bringing up again when September rolls around.