Product Details
Office Space [1999]

Office Space [1999]
Directed by Mike Judge

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1888 in DVD
  • Released on: 2003-10-06
  • Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: PAL
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, Danish, French, Italian, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 90 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Office Space is a movie for anyone who's ever spent eight hours in a "Productivity Bin", had to endure a smarmy, condescending boss, had worries about layoffs, or just had the urge to demolish a temperamental printer or fax machine. Peter (Ron Livingston) spends the day doing stupefyingly dull computer work in a cubicle. He goes home to an apartment sparsely furnished by IKEA and Target, then starts for a maddening commute to work again in the morning.

His co-workers in the cube farm are an annoying lot, his boss is a snide, patronising jerk, and his days are consumed with tedium. In desperation, he turns to career hypnotherapy, but when his hypno-induced relaxation takes hold, there's no shutting it off. Layoffs are in the air at his corporation and with two colleagues (both of whom are slated for the chute) he devises a scheme to skim funds from company accounts. The scam soon snowballs, however, throwing the three into a panic until the unexpected happens and saves the day.

A little bit like a US version of The Office, director Mike (King of the Hill) Judge's debut movie is a spot-on look at work in corporate America circa 1999. With well-drawn characters and situations instantly familiar to the white-collar milieu, he captures the joylessness of many a cube denizen's work life perfectly. Jennifer Aniston, a waitress at Chotchkie's, a generic beer-and-burger joint, plays Peter's love interest and Diedrich Bader has a minor but hilarious turn as Peter's moustached, long-haired, drywall-installin' neighbour. --Jerry Renshaw

Synopsis
Peter (Livingston) is an office drone who feels that every day of his life is the worst yet. After an incident involving a hypnotist, Peter stops caring about his job, ignoring his work and goofing off. When office consultants find out, they see his attitude as proof that Peter is management material. Director Judge (of BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD and "KING OF THE HILL") makes a surprisingly intelligent, hysterical commentary on office life, and this memorable picture firmly establishes Judge as a voice to pay attention to.


Customer Reviews

Damn it's good to be a gangsta...5
One of the least known and yet best films I own. From beginning to end it will hold a very big mirror up to all that is truly hateful and mundane when working in a cubicle maze for a boss (or bosses!) who can drive even the most upbeat and placid human being to new levels of insanity. The characters and their private revolution against the system have everyone who sees this movie cackling and nodding their heads.
It is probably the best movie to watch on a Sunday night with all your friends, just for the look your manager gives you the next morning when you mutter the immortal line: "I could burn down the building you know...". ;)

There is only one thing wrong with this DVD release...5
...and that problem is that we never get any really good Special Edition box sets here in Region 2. So, Fox, let's have a Special Edition of "Office Space" for Region 2, like you did in the States, and throw in the "Milton" shorts mentioned in the opening credits!

Aside from that, it's brilliantly written, superbly acted, beautifully filmed, exactingly designed and produced, wonderfully scored, endlessly quotable, and works on many levels at once. It functions best as an outright satire of Work. Whether you toil in the service industry, like Jennifer Aniston's character, Joanna, or in a cubicle like the majority of the rest of the characters, or in management, or consultancy, this is a must-see film. It has something for everyone who has ever held a job. However, I also believe this film should also be used as a mandatory corporate training video in every company on Earth. With everything you do, you should ask yourself: "Am I acting, speaking, or thinking like any of the characters in this film?" And if your answer to that question is "yes," it's time to re-evaluate your life, your job, and your company's policies.

The power of this film is such: Milton has a red Swingline stapler, which becomes a central feature of the movie. The story goes that the company started getting phone calls, letters, and e-mails wanting to place orders for red staplers . . . which they didn't actually make. The prop department on "Office Space" had simply painted a stapler red to make it stand out more in the film. As the film gained cult status, requests for red staplers increased to the point where Swingline caved in and now produces a bright red stapler. This film changed the American office supplies market. That's how good it is.

One thing that's been glazed over in the reviews: this film was originally released in the late 1990s, which means it came out many years before "The Office" (both the British Original and American Remake versions). And as far as I'm concerned, it's also much, much funnier than either of them. In principle, this film just shouldn't work. A movie about software engineers in which not much actually happens? Boring. A white-collar comedy with a gangsta rap soundtrack? Insane. The major antagonist (Lumbergh) being one of the most tedious, bland, lifeless drones ever to grace a screen, and the fact that the anti-hero everyone ends up cheering for, Milton, is even MORE dull, socially maladjusted, and petty? It just can't work. But it DOES, and so amazingly well, I'm surprised that this film isn't in every home on the planet yet. Everyone who has watched it with me began laughing before the opening credits were finished, and kept right on laughing through the end credits. I recommend this film without hesitation or reserve.

A 90s Classic5
I am not sure what it is about this movie that makes it such an enjoyable watch. I guess that every member of cast puts in an outstanding performance, Ron Livingston and David Herman especially are great but also Ajay Naidu is very good in this as he is in Bad Santa where he pops up in briefly and steals the movie. heck even Jennifer Ainston is very sexy and watchable in this movie.

I guess it also helps if you work in a mundane boring office job like me, then you are going to enjoy this movie.

stick it on after a boring day at work, get a couple of beers and some takeaway and your finish watching it feeling a little better!.