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The Boss of it All (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:61
Fresh:45
Rotten:16
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: Director Lars von Trier ditches the pretensions but keeps his misanthropy in The Boss of it All, a surprisingly sharp and witty comedy about office life gone haywire.
Theatrical Release:May 23, 2007 Limited
Synopsis: Controversial yet always-interesting filmmaker Lars von Trier takes a surprising turn with THE BOSS OF IT ALL. Von Trier shackles his film to a traditional narrative structure, hitting cinematic... Controversial yet always-interesting filmmaker Lars von Trier takes a surprising turn with THE BOSS OF IT ALL. Von Trier shackles his film to a traditional narrative structure, hitting cinematic heights he's been unable to reach since early efforts such as THE IDIOTS and BREAKING THE WAVES. Indeed, moviegoers who felt alienated by esoteric works such as DOGVILLE and MANDERLAY should find themselves on more comfortable ground here. THE BOSS OF IT ALL is set in Denmark, and revolves around Ravn (Peter Gantzler), the unassertive founder of a popular technology company. Ravn has invented a fictional, svengali-like boss ("Svend") of the company, whom he claims is pulling the strings from America. In fact, Svend is a front that the lily-livered Ravn uses whenever he has to make an unpopular decision. But when Ravn decides to sell the company, he has to corral an unemployed actor, Kristoffer (Jens Albinus), into playing Svend, thus introducing him to a group of co-workers who all have wildly different expectations of what this shadowy figure will be like. The strength in von Trier's film lies in the subtle interplay between Gantzler and Albinus. Albinus's "Svend" gets into a mind-boggling array of tangled and complicated situations with Ravn's co-workers, and his woeful yet hilariously overwrought acting really hits some comic high points as the movie unravels. Von Trier shoots in a "mockumentary" style which is sure to draw comparisons to both the British and U.S. versions of THE OFFICE, but THE BOSS OF IT ALL is really a work that inhabits its own peculiar universe, standing as a fine testament to a director who is not afraid to confound, surprise, and even alienate his own audience. [More]
Starring: Peter Gantzler, Jens Albinus, Fridrik Thor Fridriksson, Iben Hjejle
Starring: Peter Gantzler, Jens Albinus, Fridrik Thor Fridriksson, Iben Hjejle, Henrik Prip
Director: Lars von Trier
Director: Lars von Trier
Screenwriter: Lars von Trier
Producer: Meta Louise Foldager, Vibeke Windelov
Studio: IFC Films
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Reviews for The Boss of it All
The one last saving grace of this only marginally entertaining film is its refusal to avail itself of an ironically heroic sentimentality set up by its own narrative trajectory.
Humorous and slight, this lightweight Danish picture has its funny moments but ultimately the absurdity of the proceedings can't keep up with the conceit.
Von Trier has evidently been watching The Office, and replicates both its soulless setting and fly-on-the-desk camera-style, not to mention the Brentian fear of being unpopular.
At ten minutes too long, "The Boss of It All" is Lars Von Trier poking fun at himself and the corporate veil that mystifies all those that attempt to defeat it.
A bit of a shambles, but perhaps in its lack of von Trier's usual pretensions will lie the charm of this film for some.
Hilarity ensues, or at least it's supposed to except that the script is flat. The cast is game, but the characters are mostly uninterestingly sketched out; that would be fine if there was any real comedy.
How fitting for the film that a computer is calling the shots. But how disappointing for us that it can't punch up a script.
von Trier is just too self-absorbed a filmmaker, too much "the boss of it all" to allow for anything as anarchic and joyful as a screwball comedy to bloom from this material
The filmmaker can't help but place himself in the middle of things -- his occasional voiceover narration is more irritating than amusing. And he's got no real sense of comic timing.
A collector's item for Trier fans, that doesn't add up to much of anything for the rest of us.
If Von Trier wants to play Office, he should at least shoot for one of the more dazzling episodes.
In some ways, I enjoyed this movie more than any of his features, and yet it's sad that he has drawn in his horns so much.
At the beginning of his latest work, "The Boss Of It All," writer-director Lars Von Trier appears via voice-over to assure us that the film we are about to see "won't be worth a moment's reflection" and then spends the next 90-odd minutes making sure that
Von Trier's deconstructionist streak stymies this admirable attempt at a comedy.
Von Trier is the auteur as CEO, pushing people around for his own amusement. But not ours.
Full of in-jokes for Von Trier fans and oddly shot, the quirkiness will probably be lost on those unfamiliar with the Dogme 95 man’s work.
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