Just kill him! ! !
emmmmm sorry, in fact, this article does not encourage everyone to kill the boss. If because of this article, every office worker rebelled in his unit if he didn't agree with it, wouldn't it be a mistake... Well, ahem, I can't bear this responsibility anyway. However, in the movie called "The Office Uprising" I'm going to talk about today, the protagonist of the company's pawn really justly killed his boss.
The story also starts with the male protagonist of the film. The protagonist Desmond (hereinafter referred to as Xiao Dai) is a little rookie of a military technology company. One day, the company held a meeting and called on everyone to drink a functional beverage developed internally by the company. This beverage is a bit similar to "Dali". Xiao Dai slipped halfway in order to rush to report. As a result, when he returned to the company the next day, Xiao Dai found that the company had changed...
Damn, drinking vigorously can really do miracles!
Especially Xiao Dai's boss, it is a miracle among miracles. Show you a few stills to get a feel for it.
This is the boss under normal circumstances:
This is the boss after drinking the drink:
Uh, I’m mistaken, this is the boss after drinking the drink:
...
Everyone may guess the next plot trend is the typical "escape room + upgrade to fight monsters" mode. I don't know when it started, Hollywood B-level movies also became popular to play the office carnage. Perhaps it is the contradiction between the long-term labor relations and the ills of capital operation that have exploded day by day that gave birth to such violent thriller themes. The first of these types of movies was "Belco Experiment" written by James Gunn, the original director of the "Guardians of the Galaxy" series last year, and "The Walking Dead" starring Steven Yuan who played Glenn in The Walking Dead. The Great Riot. But why should I recommend "The Office Uprising" this time? These two reasons alone are sufficient: On the one hand, the setting can be justified. They are all creating B-level films, and whoever is more careful will be more talented. In "Belko Experiment", why are people in the company building blocked and forced to kill each other in the first place? The explanation in this regard is gone. The viral symptoms that can cause people to release their crazy desires in "The Great Riot" have BUG: why some people are not infected in the same space, and why some people can be calm when they are infected? The setting of "Office Uprising" solves the bugs well, with a clear source of infection (a drink with a problematic composition), a clear symptom (if you get offended, you will be violent, the more you drink, the more serious you get angry), and a clear defense The measures (don't drink the beverage, find the antidote if you drink it) are all arranged clearly, and by the way, I also teased the food safety issues of some big-brand beverage products-is this not an irony of reality? On the other hand, it is the process of "escape room + upgrade to fight monsters".Since we watched the employee counterattack the boss, then the movie will never let the villain turn defeat into victory, otherwise it will hurt the hearts of the audience, so the essence of this kind of movie lies in the passing. Last year's "The Great Disturbance" focused on capital exploitation, and at the same time, for political correctness, the male protagonist must be Asian; and "Office Uprising" focused on employee decadence, crises of faith, cutting corners, and other issues that were also ridiculed. How the protagonist completes the transformation in the process of upgrading and fighting monsters is the point to watch. The consequences of the various hidden dangers in the system at the moment of crisis are the points to watch. The dark side of human nature and the hidden contradictions in society are exposed through the crisis. One big thing. I believe that after watching this film, friends who are still looking for a job will no longer be able to look directly at the words "dream", "welfare", "study" and so on in the recruitment notice. In addition, the tight and happy rhythm, all kinds of insinuations, enough fighting scenes...B-level movies should have, "Office Uprising" has it, and they all do well. If you have to say it is not enough, it may be that the character's emotional portrayal is not delicate enough...Wait, why bother to pick this point? This is a B-level movie! ! ! In the final statement, I do not only love B-level movies, nor do I only love themes that expose the ugly side of human nature. I will also recommend other sunny, mild-style movies with other themes. But at this moment when everything is confused, in the near future that domestic films have to rely on the re-screening of "Wolf Warriors 2", and foreign theaters are temporarily smashing and vocal works, there is really a need for the adjustment of heterochromatic works such as "Office Uprising". Spirit.
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