OFFICE SPACE

Mike Judge. USA 1999. - 89 min.

 

Erstaufführung:

Verleih:
Produktionsfirma:
Produzenten:
Daniel Rappaport, Michael Rotenberg, Mike Judge (producer), Guy Riedel (executive producer)

Buch: Mike Judge
Vorlage: Mike Judge, »Milton animated shorts«

Kamera: Tim Suhrstedt
Musik: John Frizzell, Ice Cube (song); Dolly Parton (song "9-5")
Schnitt: David Rennie

Darsteller:
Ron Livingston (Peter)
Jennifer Aniston (Joanna)
Stephen Root (Milton)
Gary Cole (Bill Lumbergh)
David Herman (Michael Bolton)
Ajay Naidu (Samir)
Richard Riehle (Tom Smykowski)
Diedrich Bader (Lawrence)
Alexandra Wentworth (Anne)
Joe Bays (Dom Portwood)
John C. McGinley (Bob Slydell)
Diedrich Bader (Lawrence)
Paul Willson (Bob Porter)
Kinna McInroe (Nina)
Todd Duffey (Brian, Chotchkie's Waiter)
Greg Pitts (Drew)
Michael McShane (Dr. Swanson)
Linda Wakeman (Laura Smykowski)
Josh Bond (Initech Security Guard)
Jennifer Jane Emerson (Female Temp)
Kyle Scott Jackson (Rob Newhouse, Smykowski's Lawyer)
Orlando Jones (Steve, Magazine Salesman)
Barbara George-Reiss (Peggy, Lumbergh's Secretary)
Tom Schuster (Construction Foreman)
Jackie Belvin (Swanson's Patient #1)
Rupert Reyes (Mexican Waiter)
Gabriel Folse (Swanson's Patient #2)
Jesse De Luna (Cop at Fire)
Mike Judge (Stan, Chotchkie's Manager)
Justin Possenti (Spectator)
Jack Betts (Judge)
Suzanne Cryer (Customer at Chotchkie's)
Natalie Denning (Initech Employee)
K. Todd Lytle (Rush Hour Driver)

Inhalt:

 

Rezensionen:

    OFFICE SPACE

    by Roger Ebert

    Mike Judge's OFFICE SPACE is a comic cry of rage against the nightmare of modern office life. It has many of the same complaints as »Dilbert« and the movie »Clockwatchers« and, for that matter, the works of Kafka and the Book of Job. It is about work that crushes the spirit. Office cubicles are cells, supervisors are the wardens, and modern management theory is skewed to employ as many managers and as few workers as possible.
    As the movie opens, a cubicle slave named Peter (Ron Livingston) is being reminded by his smarmy supervisor (Gary Cole) that all reports now carry a cover sheet. »Yes, I know,« he says. »I forgot. It was a silly mistake. It won't happen again.« Before long another manager reminds him about the cover sheets. »Yes, I know,« he says. Then another manager. And another. Logic suggests that when more than one supervisor conveys the same trivial information, their jobs overlap, and all supervisors after the first one should be shredded.
    Peter hates his job. So do all of his co-workers, although one of them, Milton (Stephen Root), has found refuge through an obsessive defense of his cubicle, his radio and his stapler. Milton's cubicle is relocated so many times that eventually it appears to have no entrance or exit; he's walled-in on every side. You may recognize him as the hero of cartoons that played on »Saturday Night Live,« where strangers were always arriving to use his cubicle as storage space for cardboard boxes.
    Mike Judge, who gained fame through MTV's »Beavis and Butt-Head,« and made the droll animated film »Beavis and Butt-Head Do America« (1996), has taken his »SNL« Milton cartoons as an inspiration for this live-action comedy, which uses Orwellian satirical techniques to fight the cubicle police: No individual detail of office routine is too absurd to be believed, but together they add up to stark, staring insanity.
    Peter has two friends at work: Michael Bolton (David Herman) and Samir (Ajay Naidu). No, not that Michael Bolton, Michael patiently explains. They flee the office for coffee breaks (demonstrating that Starbucks doesn't really sell coffee--it sells escape from the office). Peter is in love with the waitress at the chain restaurant across the parking lot. Her name is Joanna (Jennifer Aniston) and she has problems with management, too. She's required to wear a minimum of 15 funny buttons on the suspenders of her uniform; the buttons are called »flair« in company lingo, and her manager suggests that wearing only the minimum flair suggests the wrong spirit (another waiter has »45 flairs« and looks like an exhibit at a trivia convention). The movie's dialogue is smart. It doesn't just chug along making plot points. Consider, for example, Michael Bolton's plan for revenge against the company. He has a software program that would round off payments to the next-lowest penny and deposit the proceeds in their checking account. Hey, you're thinking--that's not original! A dumb movie would pretend it was. Not »Office Space,« where Peter says he thinks he's heard of that before, and Michael says, »Yeah, they did it in `Superman III.' Also, a bunch of hackers tried it in the '70s. One got arrested.«
    The movie's turning point comes when Peter seeks help from an »occupational hypnotherapist.« He's put in a trance with long-lasting results; he cuts work, goes fishing, guts fish at his desk and tells efficiency experts he actually works only 15 minutes a week. The experts like his attitude and suggest he be promoted. Meanwhile, the Milton problem is ticking like a time bomb, especially after Milton's cubicle is relocated to a basement storage area.
    OFFICE SPACE is like the evil twin of »Clockwatchers.« Both movies are about the ways corporations standardize office routines, so that workers are interchangeable and can be paid as little as possible.
    »Clockwatchers« was about the lowest rung on the employment ladder--daily temps--but OFFICE SPACE suggests that regular employment is even worse, because it's a life sentence. Asked to describe his state of mind to the therapist, Peter says, »Since I started working, every single day has been worse than the day before, so that every day you see me is the worst day of my life.«
    Judge, an animator until now, treats his characters a little like cartoon creatures. That works. Nuances of behavior are not necessary, because in the cubicle world every personality trait is magnified, and the captives stagger forth like grotesques. There is a moment in the movie when the heroes take a baseball bat to a malfunctioning copier. Reader, who has not felt the same?

    (Quelle:  Chicago Sun-Times

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