A 20-year case of the Mondays: What’s the legacy of Office Space?
Image: Photo: Office SpacePhoto: The OfficePhoto: Corporate Graphic: Rebecca Fassola
It’s February 19, 1999, and plenty of moviegoers are missing Mike Judge’s workplace satire Office Space. Judge’s big-screen follow-up to Beavis And Butt-head Do America is based on his own experiences as a frustrated office worker and a partial adaptation of the animated shorts that were his first big break in showbiz: a series of cartoons about a mewling, stapler-coveting dweeb named Milton, played in the movie by an unrecognizable Stephen Root. But Milton’s merely a supporting character in this go-round, his appearances one of the many sketch-like elements of a script about software-company drone Peter Gibbons (Ron Livingston), who, after a disastrous hypnotherapy session, finds the solution to all of his work-related anxieties: He just stops caring about them. Unfortunately, audiences feel similarly apathetic about Office Space, and its $4.23 million opening weekend seemingly confirms the dismissal of one unnamed studio executive: “Nobody wants to see your little movie about ordinary people and their boring lives.”
It’s February 19, 2019, and to paraphrase Peter: I wouldn’t say anyone’s been missing Office Space in the past 20 years. The film’s gleefully profane rebuke of corporate culture found a cult following on home video; despite basic-cable bowdlerization, the adherents to the Tao of Peter only grew in number once the Office Space went into heavy rotation on Comedy Central. It was a word-of-mouth phenomenon that didn’t just appeal to the viewers who saw their own 9-to-5 existence replicated in the offices of Initech—as a high-schooler at the time, I saw the film become an oft-quoted phenomenon among kids who were years away from ever stepping into a cubicle. I even recall one of my teachers proudly unfurling her own rendition of Tom Smykowski’s million-dollar moonshot, the Jump To Conclusions mat. (You see, it was a mat that you put on the floor, and it had different conclusions, written on it, that you could jump to…)
At the tail end of a slacker culture that Judge’s crude animations helped define, after the dot-com bubble burst, Office Space touched a nerve. But while the exasperation of “PC LOAD LETTER” is forever, there’s much about the film that has a time-capsule quality today. It’s not just that Peter’s job at Initech—updating bank software to ward off the Y2k bug—now feels impossibly quaint. It’s that Office Space became its era’s definitive workplace comedy, making a specific, once overlooked class of white-collar workers feel like their lives were worthy of the silver screen, giving voice and shape to nuisances that they had once felt alone in noticing. It set an extremely high bar for follow-ups, which successive generations of workplace comedies have either had to take a tremendous, nuanced leap to get over, or simply obliterate by making up for some of the film’s more glaring oversights.
What set Office Space apart then and now is its elevation of the mundane. Few people work better in the medium of tedium than Mike Judge: the adolescent boredom of Beavis And Butt-Head, King Of The Hill’s square suburbia. Likewise, Office Space showed an uncommon knack for rooting out the humor and the story in the average office worker’s day-to-day, be it the surreal gantlet of memos and bosses Peter faces after making one mistake or the Sisyphean struggle of rush-hour traffic. This extends to the look of the film as well: During Bill Lumberg’s “Is this good for the company?” address, the camera pans across expertly arranged tableaux of ordinariness, the nameless Initech rank-and-file crowded together in their frumpy fashions, utilitarian eyewear, and uniformly blank expressions. Office Space is a visually busy picture with almost all of the color drained out of it—except when it comes to Chotchkie’s, the chain restaurant refuge where Peter meets Joanna (Jennifer Aniston), who’s similarly fed up with her job. There, the hues are oppressive, and pinned to the staff’s suspenders.
Judge, an animator-turned-live-action-filmmaker, finds spots to smuggle some visual invention into his purposely sterile environments. The pop of red provided by Milton’s Swingline stapler (an invention of the props department later spurred into mass production by the film’s popularity), or Peter and friends’ trudge through the drainage ditch that, as former A.V. Club film editor Scott Tobias once put it, “underlines how unnatural their occupations are.” Office Space allows itself cinematic indulgences like these, along with later sequences that tweak the blandness of the character’s lives by borrowing from mob and heist films. But many of its most memorable and resonant exchanges—the TPS-report hectoring, “sounds like somebody’s got a case of the Mondays,” the fateful meetings with the consultants (a.k.a. “The Bobs”) helping Initech to shed a few pesky employees—take place in the type of one and two shots favored by TV productions. Their shallow focus, blurring the office backgrounds into smudgy fields of grays and fluorescents, look right at home on a smaller screen.
It’s a template for the film’s most obvious TV successor: Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant’s original version of The Office. In that series, the beige plainness of the Slough Trading Estate both conveys a comedic tone and establishes a verisimilitude for the show’s mockumentary format. There’s a minimum of manicuring on display that’s instantly transportive, depressing as hell, and less of a factor in the show’s U.S. adaptation—which was, at one point, offered to Judge, but wound up under the supervision of his King Of The Hill co-creator, Greg Daniels. “They sent over the British version with a letter and some reviews,” he told Entertainment Weekly this year. “The first said, ‘The Office succeeds where movies like Office Space failed,’” which is almost exactly what Tom Shales wrote in The Washington Post when The Office came across the pond via BBC America in 2003:
“Mike Judge, creator of Beavis And Butt-head, made a darn good try at a seriously funny workplace comedy with his 1999 film Office Space, but Gervais and Merchant have even greater success. The Office is hilarious in a very hip and flippant way.”