Having worked alongside office temps for many years, I can truthfully say I'd
rather squeegee windshields at stoplights than share these poor wretches' netherlife
of thankless, anonymous conditional employment. Jill Sprecher's first film contains
so much grimly accurate detail about the low-level contract worker's lot that I have
to believe she's spent her share of time in that particular absurdist hell. The story,
co-written by Sprecher and her sister, Karen, centers on four young women toiling
in the cube farm of a large credit bureau. Sitting at absent co-workers' desks and
regarded by "permanents" as ambulatory office equipment, their moments of greatest
emotional intensity come from trying to wheedle extra staples from the stingy putz
who guards the supply cabinet. Iris (Collette, who played the title role in Muriel's
Wedding) is the new girl, a wimpy nonentity who's largely content to suffer in silence.
Posey is the brash, subversive ruckus-raiser, Margaret. It's a truly surprising --
and impressive -- turn by Posey, who's found exactly the right role to break the pert
ingénue mold that was starting to harden around her. Jane (Ubach, from Denise
Calls Up) is engaged to be married and giddy about the prospect of escape. Paula
(Kudrow) is still looking for a man -- so avidly that she'll resort to sabotaging
copiers so she can flirt with the repair guys. The four bond right away and soon
are hooking up for happy hour. It doesn't take long, though, for their bonhomie to
suffocate inside the Orwellian paranoia of the modern workplace. Nickel-and-dime
junk starts disappearing from desks all over the building and suspicion naturally
focuses on the temps. Under the stress of abusive security measures, including cameras
trained on their desks, they start to crack, openly wondering if one of their number
is the thief or a management snitch. Clockwatchers is often disturbingly brilliant
in evoking both the look and oppressive sociology of office life. The lingo, personality
types, and coping behaviors are precisely observed, though exaggerated for satiric
impact. In its quiet, unsensational way, this is one of the angriest and most politically
charged movies I've seen in a while. For all its on-target humor, it seethes with
moral fury at both the corporate beast and our acquiescence to its will. Sprecher
dulls the potential impact of her work, however, by occasionally resorting to pat
characterizations -- especially Collette's mousy Iris, who's decidedly similar to
the role she played in Muriel's Wedding. And as effective as Kudrow is as Paula,
Sprecher might have been better off casting someone who isn't so closely identified
with bimboesque characters. I consider these fairly minor faults. Clockwatcher may
not be a Grapes of Wrath for the Nineties, but its intelligence, slow-boil outrage
over grunt workers' dehumanization, and subtle assertion of their power to resist
make it a terrific piece of pro-labor propaganda. Somewhere in the great beyond,
Sam Gompers and Eugene Debs are smiling and swapping high fives.
--Russell Smith
Capsule Reviews
Clockwatchers 
Clockwatchers 
Clockwatchers 
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