Office Space
(Comedy)
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Peter Gibbons - Ron Livingston
Joanne - Jennifer Aniston
Michael Bolton - David Herman
Samir - Ajay Naidu
Lawrence - Diedrich Bader
Milton - Stephen Root
Bill Lumbergh - Gary Cole
Tom Smykowski - Richard Riehle
Ron Livingston gives a breakthrough performance in the lead role of Peter Gibbons, a young computer programmer who tries to keep a low profile while marking time inside his cubicle at Initech Corp. Peter hates everything about his job -- the stifling and spirit-killing routine, the relentlessly petty demands of procedure-obsessed superiors, the rampant paranoia inspired by efficiency experts with a license to downsize. Trouble is, Peter also hates the idea of losing a steady paycheck.
Desperate to make his life less miserable, if not more bearable, Peter agrees to a consultation with an "occupational hypnotherapist." The therapist is felled by a fatal heart attack before he can revive Peter from an attitude-adjusting trance. But the tragedy has an unexpected upside: In addition to being freed of chronic anxieties about his work, Peter becomes totally immune to fears of unemployment. In short, he stops caring and starts living.
Much to the consternation of his smarmy boss (Gary Cole), Peter blithely ignores a directive to work overtime hours on weekends and arrives at the office whenever he damn well pleases during the rest of the week. On those increasingly rare occasions when he is at his desk, Peter takes a disdainful approach to the niceties of paperwork and spends much of his time playing games on his computer. He even dares to remove a cubicle wall that blocks his view of a window.
Judge is so dead-on accurate with his sharply satirical barbs that it matters surprisingly little that "Office Space" has such a slapdash plot. At first, the comedy seems at least partially inspired by "Bartleby the Scrivener," Herman Melville's classic story about a discontent clerk who causes great consternation simply by refusing to work. But Judge moves the story in a different direction when he has two efficiency experts decide Peter is "a straight-shooter with upper management written all over him."
And then, just when it looks like the pic will chart Peter's effortless rise up the corporate ladder, Judge once again shifts gears: "Office Space" suddenly becomes a caper comedy, as Peter agrees to help two downsized co-workers take revenge on Initech with a high-tech embezzling scheme borrowed from "a very underrated movie" -- "Superman III."
Livingston strikes a deft balance between nonchalance and befuddlement, and is effortlessly ingratiating in the style of a younger Tom Hanks. As his co-workers and partners in crime, David Herman and Ajay Naidu lend strong support while earning their own fair share of laughs. (Herman plays a software engineer named Michael Bolton -- and, yes, there are many gags about his name.)
Other standouts include Cole as the soft-spoken, self-absorbed boss from hell, Diedrich Bader as Peter's redneck next-door neighbor, and Stephen Root as a disgruntled office worker whose mumbled threats of revenge lead to a predictable payoff.
Despite her prominent billing, Jennifer Aniston has relatively little to do as a waitress with her own workplace pressures. For the most part, she's on hand simply to provide romantic interest for Livingston, which she does capably enough.
"Office Space" was filmed on location in and around Austin, but the locale is never specifically identified in the pic. The story could be taking place anywhere. And that, of course, will make it even easier for many ticket buyers to savor its universal resonances and experience ticklish shocks of recognition. You don't have to be a corporate drone to enjoy Judge's satire, but "Office Space" is even more fun if you can recognize the bitter truths beneath the hilarious gags.
Camera (Deluxe color), Tim Suhrstedt; editor, David Rennie; production designer, Edward McAvoy; costume designer, Melinda Eshelman; art director, Adele Plauche; music, John Frizzell; sound (Dolby stereo), Stacy F. Brownrigg; assistant director, James W. Murray Jr.; casting, Nancy Klopper. Reviewed at Cinemark Tinseltown Westchase Theater, Houston, Feb. 11, 1999. MPAA Rating: R. Running time: 89 MIN.
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