Welcome to the Office
Generally speaking, movies about work -- more specifically,
movies about that blemish on the middle and upper classes, the
office -- make me run screaming.
After putting up with coworkers, cramped quarters, telephone
calls, and, of course, filing five days a week, I don't feel the
need to replicate these experiences in a darkened theater. But
every once in a while, there's reason to escape the real world
workweek and watch one on celluloid.
For instance, Office Space, a very funny, very underrated
little film, offers joy in its characters doing everything a
real-life harried office employee would so like to do: smashing
the fax machine and printer, telling the boss off, making it
well known that what you do during the day in no way reflects on
who you really are. In the best office movies, the everyday gets
twisted and reformulated -- suddenly, it has meaning, even if
it's not as optimistic as we might desire.
Bartleby, a contemporary update of the short story
"Bartleby the
Scrivener" by Herman Melville, is such a movie. This is despite
the fact that its characters, in the end, never really escape
the confines of work. In fact, it seems that most of them don't
really want to; they're bored but comfortable. At least in the
office they have a role to fulfill and a purpose to achieve,
which is more than can be said for the rest of the fluctuating
world.
Bartleby's opening credits buzz by in brightly colored,
Twilight
Zone spiral style. While unabashedly goofy, wailing theremin
music completes the retro sci-fi feel, we quickly find that the
film embraces surrealism of the most absurdly everyday sort.
Although not taken to the extremes of The Trial or
Brazil, Bartleby's office is over-stuffed with
file cabinets, swivel chairs, and, most importantly, paper.
This small, unnamed, constantly humming record-keeping office is
inhabited by the following: Vivian (Glenne Headly), the verbose
and sublimely annoying secretary; Rocky (Joe Piscopo), the
tough, colorful strong arm; Ernie (Maury Chaykin), overweight,
incompetent, and way too descriptive of his personal life; and
the Boss (the exceptional David Paymer), who tries, if not to
improve his office, to just keep it functioning.
Enter Bartleby, played with expert droopy-eyed nervousness by
Crispin Glover.
His hair is full yet flops over his eyes in an unnecessary
comb-over, as though he has resigned himself already to future
baldness. In response to an ad placed by Vivian ("Dull job. Lo
pay. Vibrating workplace."), Bartleby offers ambiguous answers
to interview questions about the vaguely defined job. When the
boss asks what he is looking for in a new position, Bartleby
responds: "This one would be fine."
At first, Bartleby is an anti-social but hard worker who files
"a week's worth of records in just a few days." Soon enough,
however, his signature phrase, "I would prefer not to," begins
popping up at the most inopportune moments. Bartleby refuses to
assist his boss in any matter, and eventually stops working at
all. When, upon finding the window stuck shut, he tells Vivian
that he would "prefer some air," she points him to the air vent,
and says, "If you listen closely, you can hear the ocean."
Bartleby then passes his days, even after being fired, staring
blankly at the vent. His commission, it seems, is to stand
guard in anticipation of some hazy purpose for living. Only the
sound of the ocean might set him free.
Freedom, however, cannot really be found in the workplace.
Perhaps the most laudable aspect of the film is the set
designer's keen eye for the absurdly normal, headache inducing
office environment. Really, the office is the most obtrusive
character in Bartleby: oppressively drab oranges, greens,
and browns dominate the carpets, furniture, and walls, and the
building sits on a large rocky knoll above interlocking
highways, totally inaccessible to pedestrians.
A photo mural of a forest with deer covers one section of the
office wall, but this representation of nature is even more
claustrophobic than plain paint -- it's a perversion of freedom
where leaves never fall, colors never change, and deer remain
frozen in place. Beautifully old-fashioned, surreal matte
paintings straight out of a modernized The Cabinet of Dr.
Caligari constitute the outside through establishing shots.
The sky that fills the top half of the shots, however, is never
blue but always filled with gray storm clouds that bear down on
the building with an almost palpable pressure. This office seems
to exist in some limbo where the omnipresent threat of a storm
is as dense and weighty as a prison sentence. It's a
penitentiary for the non-criminal, and a continually witty and
dry visual joke.
In light of this horrendous environment, one wonders, along with
the rest of the film's characters, why Bartleby would choose to
stay. While a film like Office Space replenishes our
faith in ourselves by stating that we are not defined solely by
what we do, Bartleby takes a grimmer approach. Bartleby
himself only exists because the office exists.
The same is true for the other characters, although only the
boss realizes this and only near the film's end. If the
workplace were to disappear they might too and fade into the
forgotten yet orderly oblivion of shag carpets, coffee makers,
and army green filing cabinets. In essence, Bartleby
suggests that capitalist office culture necessarily defines
people solely by what they do, i.e., by how they contribute
product -- and thus capital -- to the economy. When their
ability to produce is taken away (when, for example, Bartleby is
fired), their entire self-definition is likewise removed --
office workers thus depend on their office environment for
meaning, for purpose, and even for existence.
The moment when Bartleby's viewers realize they know
nothing of these characters outside the office environment is an
unsettling one, for it resounds clearly in the real work-world.
We know Bartleby's characters as well as we know our own
coworkers; that is, only through their job description and the
product they manufacture. This reduction makes us prisoners of
the office mentality and creates an environment in which during
daily social "interactions," we never really interact at all.
When the boss does interact with Bartleby outside of the office
confines, it is with disastrous results; he finds, in Bartleby,
far too much of himself. And when he sadly murmurs, "Ah,
Bartleby. Ah, humanity," it is with the import and exhaustion of
a thousand office drones decrying their place in life.
Funny, somber, absurd, and, finally, achingly sad,
Bartleby is a fine, understated piece of filmmaking. Its
final shot of identical knolls with identical buildings between
identical highway stretches is a fitting end: inside each
building are a thousand stories that will never be told. Free
those stories, and the prisoners of the workplace might finally
hear the ocean.
30 May 2002