Brings to mind Michael Moore, except not nearly as serious, rigorous, angry or focused.
Fired! (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:27
Fresh:12
Rotten:15
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: This well-intentioned documentary is too broad in its subjects to have any sort of cohesion.
Theatrical Release:Feb 2, 2007 Limited
Synopsis:
If you spend any time at all in the workplace you’re going to get laid off, down-sized, let go, out-sourced, axed, terminated, canned, cancelled, dismissed…FIRED!
When actress Annabelle Gurwitch...
If you spend any time at all in the workplace you’re going to get laid off, down-sized, let go, out-sourced, axed, terminated, canned, cancelled, dismissed…FIRED!
When actress Annabelle Gurwitch was fired from a play by Woody Allen she wondered how she would cope with being fired by a cultural icon. Turning to friends in show business she was assured she was not alone. Once the subject had been broached, everyone she knew from her rabbi and gynecologists to her colleagues had advice and their own accounts of getting the boot to offer. This set her off on a journey to answer the question: was being fired going to be the best thing or worst thing that had happened in her working life.
Annabelle turned the wit and trauma of the “fired” experience into a book, which was recently published by Simon and Schuster. The book has received rave reviews and been featured on The Today Show, People Magazine, InStyle, CNN, NPR’s Talk of the Nation and widely praised. The Washington Post called it, “ a caustic but merry compendium of failure.” The New York Times said, “Fired proves that sometimes losing well is the best revenge.” The book has been number #1 on the New York Post Hot List and featured in Oprah’s Anticipation list.
As she was writing the book she became interested in the downsizings occurring all over the country. She began researching and traveling the country, interviewing people as diverse as Tim Allen, Sarah Silverman, Jeff Garlin, Anne Meara, David Cross and GM workers in Lansing, Michigan whose perspectives ranged from the tragically comedic to proving that old adage when one door closes another door opens, to the just plain tragic. Annabelle attended job fairs, received “outplacement services”, interviewed human resource directors, downsizers, and the downsized who were seeking new jobs.
Her journey took her to the office of Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary under President Clinton, and to economist Ben Stein who spoke to her of the growing insecurity the American worker faces today and the incredible inequities being created through corporate and government policies affecting every working or as the case may be, not working American. Fired! reminds us that all great success come out of failure and being fired can be a part of the growth process, that humor helps, and that if you’re employed in America today your firing may be both the best and the worst thing that can happen in your working life.
--© Official Site
Starring: Tim Allen, David Cross, Tate Donovan, Jeff Garlin
Starring: Tim Allen, David Cross, Tate Donovan, Jeff Garlin, Sarah Silverman, Harry Shearer, Fred Willard, Andy Dick, Illeana Douglas, Ben Stein, Bob Odenkirk, Paul F. Tompkins
Director: Chris Bradley, Kyle LeBrache
Director: Chris Bradley, Kyle LeBrache
Screenwriter: Annabelle Gurwitch
Studio: Shout! Factory
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Reviews for Fired!
A sharper documentarian might've tried harder to bridge the gap between the problems of the legitimate American work force and the struggles of relatively well-off celebrities, but Gurwitch, while charming, isn't exactly brimming with insight.
The basic message here is that everybody gets fired at some time during their careers, and that being able to laugh at yourself might be the best medicine to deal with that trauma.
The video is heavy on actors and other showbiz types, and the self-centered Gurwitch doesn't distinguish between a factory worker laid off after decades on the job and an actor getting rejected during tryouts.
At the very least, it's gainful, worthwhile employment for its likable star.
Annabelle Gurwitch was fired from a play by Woody Allen and has been making something of a cottage industry out of the experience ever since. Having written a book about being fired, she has now made a documentary as well, and it's something of a mess.
Narcisisstic, un-empathetic, but stumbles into genuine entertainment at times despite that.
As for her anticorporate muckraking, I can say only that I have watched Michael Moore and I have met Michael Moore, and Gurwitch is no Michael Moore.
The film version makes a sincere if scattershot effort to exorcise its subjects' feelings of hurt and embarrassment through the healing power of comedy.
luckily for Gurwitch you can't get fired from a direct-to-DVD release.
Ignore the earnest bits here and zero in on what Fired! does best -- treating trauma with a light-bright touch.
I was truly shocked when I looked at my watch and what seemed to be an hour and a half was only forty minutes.
Documentarians Chris Bradley and Kyle Labrache keep things moving at a nice pace while indulging Gurwitch's possibly too frequent attempts to tie the expanding film in to the event that inspired it.
Serious portions, in which Gurwitch appears far too often to be mugging and cracking wise, are intercut with dumb sketches.
The filmrambles a bit in places and its structure is veryloose and unformed leaving Fired! assomething of a misfire.
The film is funny for the first 10 minutes -- maybe 15 -- but it soon grows tiresome and repetitive.
The documentary Fired! contains slivers of shtick that play more as diverting filler than prime comedy material.
Latest News for Fired!
April 15, 2008:
450 New Line Employees Let Go ![]()
The downsizing of New Line Cinema started Monday, with corporate parent Warner Bros. cutting 450 jobs from the company's payroll. More...
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