Clockwatchers Movie Review
Clockwatchers Review

"Clockwatchers" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Jill SprecherProducer : Gina Resnick
Screenwiter : Jill Sprecher,Karen Sprecher
Starring : Parker Posey,Lisa Kudrow,Toni Collette,Alanna Ubach
List of great unsolved mysteries in the universe at the present time. Number
one: Who/What created it. Number two: All other questions associated with
creation. Number three: What inspires people to create?
The creation instinct tends to be downplayed in relationship to the other two.
Perhaps this is because of the fact that the creation instinct has very little
impact upon the modern world. It really, unless you happen to be a curious
person or a psychoanalyst, doesn't concern you why a writer wants to write, a
painter wants to paint, etc. However, even the writers and painters often do
not have much of a clue where their ideas come from. However, when one sees a
movie like Clockwatchers, the question that hits your mind is "why would anyone
wish to do a movie about stealing office supplies?"
Stealing office supplies may have been a crime we have pretty much all engaged
in at some point in our lives. It may have been an event that made our workday
a little more interesting. It is not, however, what one would think about as
cannon fodder for the plot of an hour-and-a-half long movie. Yet it works
surprisingly well.
The success of Clockwatchers in having a vignette-esque nature and being about
nothing more than stealing office supplies leads me to believe that we may see
a whole new slew of art-house films about the office space. Think of the
opportunity. We could have one about the guy who replaces the water cooler
finding out that there is a plot to drain the water every time he turns his
back. We could also have another about files being deleted from the computer
system.
On second thought, I think Clockwatchers has taken the intra-office genre as
far as it can currently go.
Clockwatchers focuses on four temps. We have a temp poet-philosopher Iris
(Toni Collette). We have the office subversive Margaret (Parker Posey). We
have a temp aspiring-actress Paula (Lisa Kudrow). Finishing up the list we
have a temp aspiring-housewife Jane (Alanna Ubach). These four go through the
motions of doing nothing. Iris, serving as both witness and narrator to the
odd sequence of events that follows, wishes for something more to happen.
Be careful what you wish for, Iris.
As office supplies start disappearing, the atmosphere of the office turns from
watching the clock to watching the workers. The administration becomes
completely Orwelian. As the office workers begin to suspect each other, the
entire façade of friendless disintegrates into a realm of paranoia.
You are probably thinking. All of this from office supplies?
If you are thinking that, then skip the movie. Its only audience is the
art-house viewer who can appreciate both the trademark Parker Posey wit and a
movie that has about twenty times more intelligence than pace. If that didn't
cross your mind, than go ahead and rent it.
The problem inherent in the title Clockwatchers is that it leaves itself open
for the attack that I will now make. At the points where the movie drills home
how utterly boring life in the office is, Clockwatchers makes you watch the
clock. Its pace is so slow that it has to ride completely on its intellectual
side, which falters through the first half.
Yet to call this movie downright bad discounts the great deal of wisdom and
surreal poetry that it possesses. Because of this intelligence, the end result
is more good than bad. It just makes you pose the four most pondered question
in the universe: why make good movies so damn slow?
Tick tock.
Reviewer: James Brundage





