The Assistant
Drama
Storyline
A searing look at a day in the life of an assistant to a powerful executive. As Jane follows her daily routine, she grows increasingly aware of the insidious abuse that threatens every aspect of her position.
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"âThe Assistant,â a timely story about abuse of power in the workplace, left me shaken and angry. This quietly devastating film about a young assistant (Julia Garner) to a prominent entertainment executive is inspired by the Me Too movement (and clearly, the bad actions of Harvey Weinstein). The story accurately portrays the weighty emotional toll that stems from knowing something isnât quite right, but you are powerless to do anything about it. Jane (Garner) is just starting out in her career. She puts in long hours at the New York office of a powerful film exec, and she takes continual emotional and verbal abuse from her boss (whom we never see). Thereâs nothing glamorous or rewarding about her job, but those around her give constant reminders that she is the lucky one simply because she is employed there. Jane is faced with hostile, degrading comments from almost everyone she comes in contact with, but she quietly goes about her business and tries her best to ignore it. Writer / director Kitty Green chooses to center her methodical, orderly narrative around a female assistant, which makes the film all the more powerful. She uses point of view shots that make it feel as if youâre right there in the office, stepping directly into the characterâs shoes. The story takes place over one day in a drab office as Jane begins to see a pattern of events that donât add up. Sheâs someone who doesnât quite know enough to have a clear, undeniable picture of whatâs going on, yet she still knows something definitely isnât quite right. Itâs unsettling and effective, and it something to which young women (and some young men) everywhere will sadly relate. When Jane tries to do the right thing, sheâs stonewalled by a Hollywood culture where abuse is tolerated, joked about, and covered up â in other words, itâs accepted. She watches as her colleagues joke about these escapades while laughing off her concerns. An unhelpful HR director (the terrific Matthew Macfadyen) dismisses her complaints as âbullshitâ and a product of âjealousy,â which is infuriating to watch because it feels so steeped in truth. Even more disturbing is that while eyes have been opened thanks to the âMe Tooâ movement, this gross misconduct is still going on in offices all over the world. Newsflash to those working in the entertainment industry (and elsewhere): if you donât speak up, or if you laugh about or shrug off bad behavior, youâre part of the problem. âThe Assistantâ is a sobering reminder that just because âthatâs the way it isâ doesnât make it right."
Read full review â"You'd be hard-pressed to find a film that moves with such unassuming intensity as 'The Assistant', a film that demands full attention from its audience to tell a frustratingly normalised story of frustrating normalised harassment. It's a quiet film brimming with power, one that is not to be missed. - Ashley Teresa Read Ashley's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-the-assistant-meek-and-mad"
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