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Office Space turns 20: How the film changed the way we work

388 点作者 iamben超过 6 年前

26 条评论

StevePerkins超过 6 年前
&gt; <i>&quot;Instead of personality-stripping cubicles, organisations would go on to favour open-air office plans...</i>&quot;<p>Absolutely nothing fundamental has changed. I feel like if &quot;Office Space&quot; were being re-made today, open floor plans would be one of the horrors that it would lampoon.<p>Not so much the open floor plans themselves, mind you. But rather the surreal absurdism of which they&#x27;re just an example. Twenty years ago, we understood that &quot;Hawaiian Shirt Day&quot; was superficially supposed to be a morale booster, but was actually a morale sink in practice. Today, open floor plans were initially pitched as &quot;collaboration&quot; aids, but most people have to come to realize that they&#x27;re really about cost savings, and are counter-productive to actually getting focused work done.<p>Most white collar humor comes from shining a cynical spotlight on the disconnect between what business leaders say, and what business workers actually experience. And the Kafkaesque situation of most people feeling this way, yet us not being able to openly say so in the workplace itself.<p>The superficial examples may change, but that underlying theme is still central to white collar office work. Perhaps it always will be.
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gilbetron超过 6 年前
I worked for a small tech company that, like many, was valued extremely highly in 1999, but the owner didn&#x27;t listen to advisors and so we fell down the cliff with the other tech companies. He was dejected, along with most of the company, for most of 2000&#x2F;2001. The company still had steady revenue from government stuff, though, and those of us left kinda did what we want for several months with no guidance. I watched Office Space nearly daily (the owners stayed home watching whatever and rarely showed up) during that time. It was a weird, shared misery. I wasn&#x27;t the only one. We even ordered some red staplers and had them floating around for a while. We also, for whatever reason, printed out tons of Jeff Goldblum face shots and hid them all around the company. 10 years later and the owner was still swearing whenever he&#x27;d find one.
pseudolus超过 6 年前
I&#x27;d certainly give credit to Mike Judge for &quot;Office Space&quot; and &quot;Silicon Valley&quot; but he well and truly hit the nail on the head with the prescient &quot;Idiocracy&quot;.
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cabaalis超过 6 年前
I fail to see how the &quot;nah-gonna-work-here-anyway&quot; joke is a racist microaggression. Being unable to pronounce a name and making a joke about it could happen just as easily with a name like &quot;Tom Snuffaluffagus.&quot; I see a distinct difference between joking about a difficult name and joking about the physical attributes or ethnic history of a person of color.
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Alex3917超过 6 年前
It does seem like one could make a plausible case that Office Space has had the biggest impact on real world life of any movie of all time. Just skimming down the list, it doesn&#x27;t look like there&#x27;s anything on the AFI or BFI top 100 even comes close. Maybe 12 angry men has had a real influence on juries in some unseen way, or maybe The Social Network has also had a big influence on what careers people choose, but there&#x27;s nothing that immediately seems super obvious as surpassing it.
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noahl超过 6 年前
A coworker at a previous company had a red Swingline stapler on his desk. He told me that at one point, the company was giving them out to any employee who had to change desks more than some number of times in a single year.<p>They eventually stopped this practice when they moved so many people that they ran out of stapler budget. (But they didn&#x27;t run out of moving budget!)
cmiles74超过 6 年前
I&#x27;m a little disappointed that the piece highlights unusual work environments like Google and Facebook and cites them as examples that things have changed in the last twenty years. A big part of what made the film work for me was that it took on the common case, not the exceptional. I understand that a lot of developers work for these top-tier companies but I suspect the majority work in environments that, even today, still look a lot like Office Space.<p>The gist of the article is that little has changed and I am tempted to agree. My work environment is better, but not everyones. My partner reports to an ineffective manager and a VP who emails over the weekend, expecting to see work product early the next Monday morning; there is a clear implication they should be working during the weekend. A friend of mine was complaining recently about a manager asking them if it was &quot;good for the company&quot; to be upgrading various software products on a schedule or if it was more about making their own job easier. And so on.
maire超过 6 年前
The thing I remember most about Office Space is how the questions asked in Contextual Inquiries sound exactly the same as the questions asked by &quot;the two Bobs&quot;.<p>In the winter of 2008 (the real estate crash) I was in charge of designing a new UI. I sent a UI&#x2F;UX team to do a contextual inquiry of our biggest users. Unfortunately our Finance customers freaked out at the contextual inquiries because they thought we were getting rid of their jobs!<p>You tell me if this sounds like a Contextual Inquiry: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=RkmuI5W694o" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=RkmuI5W694o</a>
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synesso超过 6 年前
There&#x27;s a great between-the-lines take in this movie. Bill Lumbergh is dating Peter&#x27;s girlfriend on the Saturday. That&#x27;s why he forces him into work ... and why the girlfriend also leaves a message.
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4thaccount超过 6 年前
Office Space is similar to Dilbert in how well it describes certain aspects of cubicle life. I&#x27;m lucky to work for a good company, but they all have aspects of these worlds that describe them too well.
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amatecha超过 6 年前
&quot;How the film changed the way we work&quot; -- Printers don&#x27;t use the error message &quot;PC LOAD LETTER&quot; anymore? ;)
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rjain15超过 6 年前
&gt;&quot;inept managers, mind-numbing bureaucracy, forced office parties, repetitive busywork and jargon-filled memos read by none.&quot;<p>till date, I have to read jargon-filled memos and watch mind numbing training videos. Nothing has changed.
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rb808超过 6 年前
Jira. Even though the movie predates it, I feel like it should have been in there.
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wtmt超过 6 年前
&gt; “But as a piece of commentary, the film’s damning portrayal of bad management and inefficient workplaces holds up today.”<p>I’d say that tech workplaces have gotten worse in many ways after this movie’s time. Office plans are now usually not very conducive to getting work done without a noise canceling headset (which many companies won’t pay for), and the greed at the CxO levels for higher pay&#x2F;compensation for themselves at the cost of thousands or even hundreds of thousands below their levels could be appalling in many larger companies.<p>If anything, we need an Office Space 2.0 to be made with contemporary observations and critiques.
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DevX101超过 6 年前
I was going into college around when this film came out. I loved the movie, but it also made me adamant that I never wanted to work in a work environment depicted in the movie.<p>This movie was definitely a part of the reason why I never majored in Comp Sci even though I loved the subject in high school. I assumed all tech employees would inevitably live the life of a cynical corporate drone in IT overwhelmed by bureaucracy and office politics.<p>Fortunately many different companies emerged since then which had different approaches to work culture, but this movie probably changed my life!
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knorker超过 6 年前
&gt; personality-stripping cubicles<p>Oh, if only we could have cubicles! Now tech companies are instead taking after boiler room call centers.<p>They didn&#x27;t know how good they had it.
bellerose超过 6 年前
I remember reading a comment on youtube about the ending of the movie. Supposedly who ever wrote the script wanted something to happen where Peter would detest his new job in construction. The director didn&#x27;t want it and so the ending is a happy one.
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nikisweeting超过 6 年前
Another interesting part of that movie is the salami slicing plot line. Salami slicing is the name for collecting factional cents off thousands of transactions to accumulate a big payout without people noticing. It&#x27;s featured in a bunch of movies:<p>- Superman III<p>- Hackers<p>- I love you Philip Morris<p>- Office Space<p>I mention it in my talk about how to program database systems safely when handling money to avoid situations like that. It can also happen by accident when converting between floats and Decimals incorrectly while programming.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;pirate&#x2F;django-concurrency-talk" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;pirate&#x2F;django-concurrency-talk</a>
jim_bailie超过 6 年前
I always felt that there should have been a sequel where Peter, Michael and Samir eventually reunited and started that company Penetrode.
sifoobar超过 6 年前
Funny story: I had just started working at a SV-based startup with mandatory surfing lessons and a fivefinger-wearing transhumanist CEO when Silicon Valley started.<p>Watching it was very painful, to say the least. Having to go through it is one thing, having your nose rubbed in it another.
DrScump超过 6 年前
I&#x27;m surprised that neither the article nor comments here to date point out that the original setting was the cartoon shorts series &quot;Milton&quot;[0], where Milton and Lumbergh are the central characters. The film&#x27;s climax with Milton&#x27;s breakdown is foreshadowed in the Milton series (&quot;I could put strychnine in the guacamole...&quot;)<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Milton_(cartoon)" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Milton_(cartoon)</a><p>I think Gary Cole was underrated; he was awesome in &quot;American Gothic&quot;.
foreigner超过 6 年前
This movie had a big effect on my personally. I quit my job of 5 years in no small part because of watching it.
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purplezooey超过 6 年前
Notice there are no open plan offices in the movie.
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jugg1es超过 6 年前
Mike Judge is a prescient person.
btilly超过 6 年前
True story. I know a company that did a major layoff in by showing office space. As the movie progressed, HR walked around and tapped people on the shoulder. If you were still there for the end of the movie, you were still there...
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austincheney超过 6 年前
If Office Space were remade today it would be all about hyper-sensitivity, worship of popular developers by name, walk outs, and Dunning-Kruger people. Unfortunately, a key target audience would likely take this as a serious personal attack.
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