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Clockwatchers
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Directed by Jill Sprecher.
Four women reflect on their lowly place in the corporate caste system in this dryly satiric comedy. Iris (Toni Collette) is a college graduate who hasn't decided what she wants to do with her life, except that she doesn't want the job her father has lined up for her at a frozen food company. While pretending to look for other work, she signs on with a temp agency, which sends her out to do office work for Global Credit, a particularly faceless corporation where the permanent employees go out of their way to avoid the temps. Iris is very much aware that she's at the bottom rung at Global, and she bonds with three other women in the temp pool. Paula (Lisa Kudrow) talks about her career as an actress and insists that she will only temp until one of her auditions pans out. Jane (Alanna Ubach) prattles on about her wealthy fiancé, although her friends are convinced that he's cheating on her. And Margaret (Parker Posey) is at once the rebel of the group, regarding her job and general office procedure with a barely disguised contempt, and the one who most desperately wants a "real" job with Global. When office supplies and various personal items start to disappear, all signs point to one of the temp workers (most likely Margaret), though none will own up to any wrongdoing. Clockwatchers was the directorial debut for filmmaker Jill Sprecher, who co-wrote the screenplay with her sister Karen Sprecher. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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JennJenn better as a short film
by Jenn in Jenn Blog
lost interest.
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"Clockwatchers is a fun little shot at corporate America but drones on and on in the boring lives of four clueless temporary workers. Screenwriting attempts to pull you into each of the women's lives but doesn't go far enough to be funny or to make you care about them. While many of the little jokes can make one laugh if you've worked in a corporate setting, this movie would have been better suited as a short film. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Why more films are not set in the office environment, where most human beings spend the bulk of their waking hours, is a cinematic puzzle. Seemingly serene and stifling on the surface, the carpeted walls and halls of the modern-day company are fraught with more romantic passion, political intrigue, and sheer comic possibility than is contained in the greatest works of Shakespeare. A handful of films are baffling Hollywood's marketing strategists in the late 20th century by bravely attempting to limn the cubicle set, ending up in the "underrated gem" file. Among them are Office Space (1999) and this little-seen treasure of a film, the writing and directing debut of Jill Sprecher (who penned the script with her sister Karen Sprecher). Perfectly capturing the spirit-murdering boredom of life at the bottom rung of the corporate food chain as well as the bizarre, niggling pettiness (fueled by raw, naked fear) of those higher up the ladder, Clockwatchers (1997) is sad, funny, and sharp as a box of requisitioned office tacks. Each of the four female leads is a standout, particularly independent film staple Parker Posey in the most complicated and least typified role. The real star of the Sprechers' film, however, is their script, clearly designed by a pair of siblings who have toiled in the wasteland of rolling chairs and coffee breaks and emerged to tell about it with sheer honesty. Maybe such "office films" aren't hits because they're just too painfully familiar, but art doesn't exist to reassure, and for a film as deceptively entertaining as it is, Clockwatchers asks some painful questions about the way people work at life and live at work. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
 



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MCMikeNamara
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loved it.
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loved it.
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mercurial
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