The movie never gets old.
My wife and I watched Office Space a few weeks ago and I was so surprised how fresh it seemed. 21 years ago. Go back 21 years before it and it was 1978. Blows my mind.
“I don’t like talking about my flair”
“I don’t like my job, and i don’t think I am going to go anymore”
That is when I fell in love with Jennifer Aniston and this movie.
Question: Were the squirrels merry or married?
I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen her in anything else, at least nothing significant. I’ve never seen Friends, though I did watch the Ferris Bueller TV show she was the sister on.
Still waiting until I can buy my own Jump to Conclusions mat.
Fun fact, Michael Bolton is played by David Herman who does voice over work in all the best animated shows. Futurama…and whatever else.
I say the “PC load letter” thing to myself every time the printer runs out of paper at work.
Married. Married is funnier, therefore it’s married. Plus, it sound like married to me.
Bob’s Burgers, as well.
Fun fact: “PC load letter” was an actual error message on HP printers of that era. It means the paper cartridge (abbreviated PC) is out of letter sized paper.
Funner fact: David Herman ad libed the “PC load letter” bit. As scripted, he was just supposed to pick up some documents from the printer while talking to his coworkers. But the printer unexpectedly ran out of paper in the middle of filming the scene and displayed the now famous error message, and he just went with it.
She was in Horrible Bosses, co-starring with Kevin Spacey. Guess which one was playing a sexual predator.
I believe he dressed up like a wizard on Angel, playing a guy in a DND group that larps or something.
Herman also played the Secretary of State in Idiocracy.
What’s stopping you?
https://www.amazon.com/Initech-Jump-Conclusions-Office-Space/dp/B07GL3CBBZ
Incidentally, Office Space was released in 1999 and ten years later, Mike Judge released Extract, set in a company that makes flavoring extracts. The first company is from the point of view of a low-level employee while the second is from the point of view of the employer.
I read somewhere that there was supposed to be a darker tone in the ending scene of the movie, which suggested that Bill Lumbergh died in the fire. Peter was supposedly going to ask Samir and Michael if they had gone to Lumbergh’s funeral, to which they all replied no.
Gonna show her my “Oh!” face.
haven’t heard that but at the very end, when they are working outside, the boss comes over. He is another Lumbergh, but they muted what he said in the released version
I’m pretty sure it’s “married,” and is meant to imply he saw the squirrels fucking.
yep, it’s one of the deleted scenes included on the DVD. But I think Lumbergh was supposed to have had a heart attack or something.