Get a Job

2016

Action / Comedy

96
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten9%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled21%
IMDb Rating5.21023549

careeryoung adultpost college

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Miles Teller Photo
Miles Teller as Will Davis
Anna Kendrick Photo
Anna Kendrick as Jillian Stewart
Bryan Cranston Photo
Bryan Cranston as Roger Davis
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
606.51 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 23 min
P/S ...
1.26 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 23 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Floated21 / 10

Disjointed unfunny mess of a comedy

There's a reason as to why this film was released years after its filming date and went straight to video. It's quite a mess of a comedy. Featuring a little too many characters (most of which we don't care about) trying to get jobs just isn't entertaining. The comedy is just forced, is either gross out and silly and in no way clever- very standard and a little too "try-hard" for its R rating.

The film has the feel of a sitcom comedy (perhaps there is/has been a sitcom with this exact same type of plot/story). Thankfully the film isn't long as it's less than 1 hour 20 minutes (excluding end credits). Certainly just a one time watch.

Reviewed by Prismark104 / 10

Work to rule

Get a Job is a so-so movie that was shot in 2012 but only released in 2016 when most of its cast became famous in the interim period.

It is mainly about college graduates entering the uncertain world of work and how they deal with it. Which is mainly not well which leads to money issues and confidence problems.

Will Davis (Miles Teller) thinks he has a job lined up after working as a summer intern only to discover that the firm had downsized and he needs to find another job quickly. His room mates are struggling with their jobs as well. His father (Bryan Cranston) and his girlfriend (Anna Kendrick) both lose their jobs soon after.

The youngsters are hard working slackers and it is the employers that are actually presented as vile but the film is not really that funny.

Reviewed by StevePulaski4 / 10

After four years of rotting on a shelf, it does nothing but further blemish great actors' careers

It's always hard to completely blast films like Get a Job because beneath an exterior of crude humor and a meandering narrative lies themes and ideas with underlying truth. The problem is that Get a Job brings such ideas to the surface but fails to capitalize on them, so it feels like they were just mere coincidences and conveniences. This wouldn't be such an issue if the film wasn't ostensibly in a hurry to go nowhere, predicating itself off of characters that feel cloyingly artificial and impractical, as well as introducing a plethora of subplots that serve no purpose other than to clutter a story with the overarching idea that life and employment in the modern world is hard, man.

The story follows Will and Jillian (Miles Teller and Anna Kendrick),a pair of recent college graduates who are looking to move in together and break out into the real-world. Will looks to have a promising gig lined up as a video-maker for a magazine, and Jillian has just taken a position in sales. Throughout his entire life, Will has heard from his father (Bryan Cranston) about his own struggle with trying to move up in the world to the position of power he's currently in, until, in a twist of events, him, Will, and Jillian are all laid off from their jobs.

This is one of the films where Will and his three deadbeat friends (Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Nicholas Braun, and Brandon T. Jackson),who all appear to have no immediate goals besides getting high and playing Xbox, can somehow afford a beautiful loft overlooking the city. The only one who seems to be doing something productive with his time is Charlie (Braun),who is somehow certified to teach chemistry to grade-school children. After a long search, Will winds up finding a position as a digital marketer under the order of Marcia Gay Harden, who implements somewhat oppressive and dehumanizing standards in her workplace, so much so that Will feels limited in his creativity when he finally begins working the job.

The remainder of the film is a whole lot of nothing, with characters wandering around, but never saying anything too compelling, Jillian becoming a lazy pothead with Will's best friends, and Will's father losing his entire identity upon being canned at his workplace. For a brief time, screenwriters Kyle Pennekamp and Scott Turpel's screenplay seems like it is going to etch in some commentary about Will's father's lack of self-identity outside of his office-duties, potentially leading down a path that highlights ideas and commentary on the millennial workplace and how young people are not letting jobs define them as people.

But that part never arrives, and we're left with watching mostly strong actors aimlessly navigate through pitfalls and trappings of lame comedic conventions. For a screenplay so generic and remarkably dry given all it has to work with, it's the kind of vehicle that you can tell attracted its young actors and actresses as a means of getting their foot in the door to hopefully bigger and better projects. Justifying what Bryan Cranston and Marcia Gay Harden saw in the material, however, is a bit tougher.

Apparently, Get a Job was shot in 2012 and planned for a larger theatrical release, but it sat on the shelf for four years, at one point with Kendrick commenting how it may never get a release due to distribution issues. Finally, in 2016, it was given a very limited theatrical and video-on demand release on various platforms, ending the film's checkered history, which we'll probably never get to fully know anyway. If nothing else, this only furthers the above assumption as to why talents like Teller and Kendrick would even bother with such a subpar script, as Get a Job's belated release only works to effectively remind and blemish both actors' (particularly Teller's) iffy filmographies when they're simply trying to be tomorrow's Oscar winners.

Starring: Miles Teller, Anna Kendrick, Bryan Cranston, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Nicholas Braun, Brandon T. Jackson, Marcia Gay Harden, Alison Brie, and John Cho. Directed by: Dylan Kidd.

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