As a math savant uncooks the books for a new client, the Treasury Department closes in on his activities, and the body count starts to rise.As a math savant uncooks the books for a new client, the Treasury Department closes in on his activities, and the body count starts to rise.As a math savant uncooks the books for a new client, the Treasury Department closes in on his activities, and the body count starts to rise.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 5 nominations total
Robert C. Treveiler
- Young Chris' Father
- (as Rob Treveiler)
Susan Savoie
- Dolores Rice
- (as Susan Williams)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Summary
Reviewers say 'The Accountant' is lauded for Ben Affleck's compelling performance and thrilling action scenes. The film's mix of thriller and drama offers a unique take on the action hero. However, the plot is criticized for being convoluted and hard to follow. Mixed reactions exist towards supporting characters and subplots, though the ensemble cast and portrayal of autism are appreciated.
Featured reviews
Being on the autism spectrum myself, I took a special interest in "The Accountant". Mind you, the movie isn't about autism. The protagonist is a mildly autistic man (Ben Affleck) who does accounting work for a number of vile people. It isn't long before there's a hit out on him.
A lot of the movie gets complicated from the number of characters. It apparently drew controversy for the depiction of autism (much like how "Rain Man" now draws controversy). Even so, I liked the complexity that they gave Affleck's character; his narrow focuses were accurate for autism. In the end, it's not a great movie, but a clever one. Affleck's performance, plus those of Anna Kendrick, John Lithgow, J. K. Simmons, Jon Bernthal and others make this worth seeing.
A lot of the movie gets complicated from the number of characters. It apparently drew controversy for the depiction of autism (much like how "Rain Man" now draws controversy). Even so, I liked the complexity that they gave Affleck's character; his narrow focuses were accurate for autism. In the end, it's not a great movie, but a clever one. Affleck's performance, plus those of Anna Kendrick, John Lithgow, J. K. Simmons, Jon Bernthal and others make this worth seeing.
This film is utterly incredible. The acting is amazing, I loved the plot, the action was brilliant. As a person with autism I can say that Affleck portrayed autism perfectly, I don't understand why this film gets so much controversy. Every person with autism is different and acts different to one another. I never liked action films before this but this film is just so amazing and original that I came to like action films. I have watched this so many times and never get bored of it. I hope the sequel is as good as this, love to see more films like this. Would definitely recommend this film to anyone, no matter what genre they prefer. 10/10.
This is a wonderful movie. A lot more of an action flick than title suggests. Was a pleasant surprise as plot unfolded. Ben Affleck is perfect for this part. Well written script and good acting by all. Nice use of flashbacks for character development. Many twists and turns and a bit of a surprise ending. Watch it! You won't be disappointed.
When it released in theatre i dismissed it thinking it might be a dull movie on an accountant.
Saw this recently (March 2017) on a dvd which i own.
I was expecting another Bourne rip off or shaky cam stuff but this one turned out to be an excellent thriller.
Revisited it again (March 2022) on Amazon Prime but this time with my family.
Affleck did a superb job n he adopted the traits, behaviors and symptoms of autism very well.
There is sufficient character development n the story has good amount of twists n turns.
There is ample amount of action, both gun firing n hand to hand combat.
The headshots r brutal, the body count is high n the movie ended well leaving room for a much needed sequel.
Thankfully it is not shot in hand held camera a la Jason Bourne n Taken style jus to make it appear fast paced.
The movie is engaging n entertaining.
Suspense n tension is maintained throughout.
Director O'Connor succeeded in normalising autism and showing that behavioural conditions should not get in the way of anyone's life.
The song To Leave Something Behind by Sean Rowe is haunting n mesmerizing.
Saw this recently (March 2017) on a dvd which i own.
I was expecting another Bourne rip off or shaky cam stuff but this one turned out to be an excellent thriller.
Revisited it again (March 2022) on Amazon Prime but this time with my family.
Affleck did a superb job n he adopted the traits, behaviors and symptoms of autism very well.
There is sufficient character development n the story has good amount of twists n turns.
There is ample amount of action, both gun firing n hand to hand combat.
The headshots r brutal, the body count is high n the movie ended well leaving room for a much needed sequel.
Thankfully it is not shot in hand held camera a la Jason Bourne n Taken style jus to make it appear fast paced.
The movie is engaging n entertaining.
Suspense n tension is maintained throughout.
Director O'Connor succeeded in normalising autism and showing that behavioural conditions should not get in the way of anyone's life.
The song To Leave Something Behind by Sean Rowe is haunting n mesmerizing.
A thriller should be entertaining and smart, both of which The Accountant is. Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) is not Christian in the traditional sense, but he is a wolf of a hunter, about as accurate as anyone behind a telescopic gun barrel could be.
Yet he's a brilliant accountant at the same time, thank you, autism: He has a savant's grasp of facts and numbers (think Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man) but a serious deficiency in the affective and communicative categories. Affleck plays him with a grasp of disaffection that is almost humorous, in fact is with some of his straight-arrow responses: "I don't guess," he says when queried if he had a hunch about the perpetrator of a fraud.
You see, he is hired by all kinds of wealthy and criminal business people and governments to uncook their books or whatever is necessary to discover fraud or put the books in order. These jobs lead to situations where he is wanted by bad guys or the IRS or whomever. Wolff's legitimate, current job for a robotics company is complicated enough for him to need several glass walls to write on (think Affleck's buddy Mark Damon in Good Will Hunting), taking in hours what would consume days for a host of professional accountants.
And so it goes according to the thriller formula that the bad guys will be on his trail, and he will be made vulnerable by a cute co-worker, Dana (Anna Kendrick), who has some of his math savvy and maybe a bit of sweet for him. The Accountant veers from formula because that romance is of the "chaste-and-from-afar" kind, almost but not quite at the kiss stage. It's pleasant not to be bothered by heavy sex when the complications are of the cerebral, themselves the core of pleasure in this brainy, but not too, action drama.
Unfortunately our autistic hero, trained by a merciless military father to defend himself because dad knew son would always be treated as different, slips into thriller stereotype, e.g. Christian puts down too many hired guns at one time, albeit in the service of a noble retaliation for a prison friend. Although the action is within the parameters of the genre, it here feels overdone given the cerebral contexts that otherwise provide plenty of thrills.
One of the joys of this film is to see Affleck show some acting chops; he may never be like Dustin Hoffman, but he's memorably stoic here, a long way from J.Lo and Gigli.
Yet he's a brilliant accountant at the same time, thank you, autism: He has a savant's grasp of facts and numbers (think Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man) but a serious deficiency in the affective and communicative categories. Affleck plays him with a grasp of disaffection that is almost humorous, in fact is with some of his straight-arrow responses: "I don't guess," he says when queried if he had a hunch about the perpetrator of a fraud.
You see, he is hired by all kinds of wealthy and criminal business people and governments to uncook their books or whatever is necessary to discover fraud or put the books in order. These jobs lead to situations where he is wanted by bad guys or the IRS or whomever. Wolff's legitimate, current job for a robotics company is complicated enough for him to need several glass walls to write on (think Affleck's buddy Mark Damon in Good Will Hunting), taking in hours what would consume days for a host of professional accountants.
And so it goes according to the thriller formula that the bad guys will be on his trail, and he will be made vulnerable by a cute co-worker, Dana (Anna Kendrick), who has some of his math savvy and maybe a bit of sweet for him. The Accountant veers from formula because that romance is of the "chaste-and-from-afar" kind, almost but not quite at the kiss stage. It's pleasant not to be bothered by heavy sex when the complications are of the cerebral, themselves the core of pleasure in this brainy, but not too, action drama.
Unfortunately our autistic hero, trained by a merciless military father to defend himself because dad knew son would always be treated as different, slips into thriller stereotype, e.g. Christian puts down too many hired guns at one time, albeit in the service of a noble retaliation for a prison friend. Although the action is within the parameters of the genre, it here feels overdone given the cerebral contexts that otherwise provide plenty of thrills.
One of the joys of this film is to see Affleck show some acting chops; he may never be like Dustin Hoffman, but he's memorably stoic here, a long way from J.Lo and Gigli.
Did you know
- TriviaWhile for dramatic effect, the script calls out the repeated use of the number "three" as an indicator of fraudulent numbers, the theory behind fraudulent number detection is known as "Benford's Law." The law states that in numbers, such as account transactions, the probability of a number occurring naturally drops, as one moves from smaller numbers to the larger numbers following a logarithmic scale. This law has been successfully used to detect fraudulent accounting transactions.
- GoofsWhen Sorkis was giving Marybeth information on the face recognition of The Accountant, he plays the recording of when Little Tony was killed, saying that the place was bugged. When Little Tony dies by getting kicked in the head, the audio file loses the signal and goes to static. Unless the bug was on the face of Little Tony, the signal would not have died.
- Quotes
Dana Cummings: What is this place?
Christian Wolff: Panamerica Airstream, 34 feet 7 inches long, 8 feet 5 inches wide. Dimensions which are perfectly adequate for one person. Preferable, even.
Dana Cummings: This is where you live?
Christian Wolff: No, I don't live here. This is a storage unit. That would be weird.
- SoundtracksHotell 2
Written and performed by Andreas Söderström and Johan Berthling
- How long is The Accountant?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- El contador
- Filming locations
- Atlanta, Georgia, USA(stand in for Plainfield, Naperville, & Chicago, Illinois)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $44,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $86,260,045
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $24,710,273
- Oct 16, 2016
- Gross worldwide
- $155,560,045
- Runtime2 hours 8 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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