It was awful. Saw half of it on netflix before falling asleep. Everybody in it is a variation of Roman from Party Down. Self important nerds who work in a parking lot and think they are superior to everyone else.
It was awful. Saw half of it on netflix before falling asleep. Everybody in it is a variation of Roman from Party Down. Self important nerds who work in a parking lot and think they are superior to everyone else.
:hated_it:
I liked it. Maybe because I identified with it so much because that's how I was in college. Frat Boys are evil related.
I liked it too. I caught it on PBS one night. It reminded me of the strut too, mainly because their stories of customers were in the same vein as the DJ stories on here.
Saw this at HotDocs last year. I enjoyed it but didn't love it. The "rap song" at the end was less cringe-worthy that it could've been. (That's a compliment.)
i made it about half-way through. had i not been eating lunch and looking for a way to kill time i would have stopped watching after 10 minutes. james mcnew's story about the girl from his high school really put me over the edge. if you're still complaining about some girl who dissed you 20+ years ago and the worst thing you can say about her is that she was "driving her dad's car"--and all of this seems to be based on your own imagined idea about her privileged life (paid for by her 6th grade math teacher father, one assumes)--you've lost. also, the over-intellectualizing was underwhelming: "reality bites" in a parking lot.
Probably would have been more interesting to me had it featured people who perhaps rose to the top of their personal career ladder, rather than otherwise intelligent folks who settled for working at a parking lot.
Probably would have been more interesting to me had it featured people who perhaps rose to the top of their personal career ladder, rather than otherwise intelligent folks who settled for working at a parking lot.
See, I thought that was the whole point -- there are certain jobs that lull smart people into sticking around far too long, putting their adult lives on hold. These might be fun places to work and allow for lots of acting out and idiosynchratic behavior, but they do little to challenge the employees' brains, and end up stirring up a lot of bitterness and resentment between them and their customers. The hipster video store I used to work at was that kind of place, and had a surprisingly similar atmosphere to the one on display in this movie (which, as with some here, I liked but did not love).
Probably would have been more interesting to me had it featured people who perhaps rose to the top of their personal career ladder, rather than otherwise intelligent folks who settled for working at a parking lot.
See, I thought that was the whole point -- there are certain jobs that lull smart people into sticking around far too long, putting their adult lives on hold. These might be fun places to work and allow for lots of acting out and idiosynchratic behavior, but they do little to challenge the employees' brains, and end up stirring up a lot of bitterness and resentment between them and their customers. The hipster video store I used to work at was that kind of place, and had a surprisingly similar atmosphere to the one on display in this movie (which, as with some here, I liked but did not love).
That's a good point. Maybe I'll give it another run. I was watching on Netflix instant, too, and I was deviating from the heavy dose of political docs I have been watching damn near every day -- on Herbert Hoover, Jack Abramoff, the Pentagon Papers, Hollywood and the Holocaust, every "Frontline" available. I think it's all starting to go to my head.
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:hated_it:
I liked it. Maybe because I identified with it so much because that's how I was in college. Frat Boys are evil related.
Probably would have been more interesting to me had it featured people who perhaps rose to the top of their personal career ladder, rather than otherwise intelligent folks who settled for working at a parking lot.
See, I thought that was the whole point -- there are certain jobs that lull smart people into sticking around far too long, putting their adult lives on hold. These might be fun places to work and allow for lots of acting out and idiosynchratic behavior, but they do little to challenge the employees' brains, and end up stirring up a lot of bitterness and resentment between them and their customers. The hipster video store I used to work at was that kind of place, and had a surprisingly similar atmosphere to the one on display in this movie (which, as with some here, I liked but did not love).
satellite lol
http://www.gigposters.com/venue/Satellite Ballroom/
those brought me back.
loved it.
That's a good point. Maybe I'll give it another run. I was watching on Netflix instant, too, and I was deviating from the heavy dose of political docs I have been watching damn near every day -- on Herbert Hoover, Jack Abramoff, the Pentagon Papers, Hollywood and the Holocaust, every "Frontline" available. I think it's all starting to go to my head.