Since I took the time to watch the video I feel I might as well critique it. I''ll be as honest as possible and try to get my points across bluntly.
1. I felt the pacing of the film is terrible; it's just far too slow. I'm not one that needs to see explosions and action every 5 seconds in order to be engaged in a clip, but if the pacing is going to be really slow, it has to build towards something. I guess the lawyer did get fed up and eventually threw her phone in the lake, but it was anti-climatic and predictable. It didn't take more than about a minute to understand that her job was monotonous and tiring.
2. It seemed more like a documentary than a comedy to me. Thousands of office workers are in a similar role to the main character in this film. Quiet, hard working people get taken advantage of and you see other, more social individuals, excel even when they're lazy (or a jerk). I just didn't get what was supposed to be funny. At best, the characters were slight exaggerations of real life people.
3. What's with the lack of a dialogue? Solid dialogue with a couple of jokes thrown in really could have been a nice addition.
4. I think the film was shot pretty well. Pretty good transitions from one shot to the next.
There you have it. That's my opinion, and that's all it is. Take it to heart or disregard it.
I will now critique your critique.
1. New York City does not have a lake, unless you count a reservoir in Central Park as a lake (we don't). This film is in Manhattan, which has the the Hudson River on the west and the East River on the east (though the East River is technically a channel, not a river). The cell phone was clearly thrown into the Hudson River. And the film did have explosions, but of the small emotional types that built into a crescendo. Explosions can be subtle and metaphoric.
2. People getting taken advantage of is funny. I'm a desk slave and it's a real riot. I'm laughing about my plight right now. Posting stuff on BB Forums during office hours is like me symbolically throwing my cell phone into the Hudson River. I'll go and retrieve the phone, but I'll keep throwing it back again and again. Really funny stuff.
3. I think the lack of any speech by the protagonist was a metaphor for her suffering in silence, like she doesn't have a voice in the world. She's just a tool to be used and nobody cares about her. Nice touch. By the way, is she looking? I might have a friend for her.
4. I like how you can sort of see the office window, but it's kind of glare like, as if it were maybe a prison cell.
edit: 2 typos. funny stuff.Last edited by chihorn at 8/25/2011 5:47:38 PM
Don't ask what sort of Chunks they are, you probably don't want to know. Blowing Chunks since Season 4!