FULL TIME | Omeleto
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- A young man is offered a job.
FULL TIME is used with permission from Jon Ryan Sugimoto. Learn more at jonryan.tv.
Michael Tucker is a skateboarder who has just graduated from college. While they're wondering what they're going to do for work, they're still going about their happy-go-lucky lives in New York, doing skate tricks in the park. Then Michael offered a job by a mysterious businessman, to stand in a square outside all day. Skeptical of the gig at first but happy to make some cash, Michael does his job and gets paid.
Michael also gets the offer to continue, and he makes more money over time. The more money he makes, the more he sticks to the gig, and he doesn't leave the square, even when his friends tempt him to join them in skating or a woman entreats him to help when her purse is stolen. Michael is loyal to his job, even as life passes him by -- and the days begin adding up.
Directed and written by Jon Ryan Sugimoto, this comedy has the gritty texture and look of a New York City film, with its natural light and mostly handheld camerawork. We're introduced to Michael as a free-spirited young man, indulging in the kind of loose, goofy conversation that bros have with their friends. At first, they talk about the weird things they would or would not do to make a living in a hilarious dialogue that sets up the film's resonant themes. But little do they know that Michael will get the strangest job of all.
As the film's high-concept premise plays out, it becomes strangely like a fairy tale, as well as a wily metaphor for the way we get seduced into the daily grinds of adulthood. Part of the stylistic transition is accomplished with subtle, deft craftsmanship, from the almost abstract framings of the images to the gently eerie film score by Oliver Hill, all of which evoke a strange mental netherworld nestled in an unassuming reality. The world is happening around Michael, full of life and bustle, but all he does is stand there in his square and let it pass him by, lured by the promise of money and advancement that the businessman delivers when he decides Michael has done a good job.
Actor Andrew Lutheran deftly portrays Michael with a goofy, youthful charm, one whose amiability easily comes under the sway of the businessman's money. Actor Iddo Goldberg is a cipher as Michael's employer, playing his boss with curt professionalism underlined by a sense of menace and startling flashes of intensity that scare Michael enough to keep him in line. That dangerous power, coupled with the promise of more money and a "promotion," is enough to keep Michael reeled in, loyal to his job even as his youth and spirit slowly ebb away.
FULL TIME takes its high-concept premise to its logical end, in a scene that is both wistful and bleakly funny. Though the film is entertaining to watch, it's also thought-provoking, because it forces viewers to look at the trade-offs they've made to make a living in a fresh, albeit discomfiting light. It asks questions about what keeps us in boxes, the rules are we abiding by and the cost we pay for a sense of security that is sometimes an illusion at best. It also asks when we believe we earn the right to enjoy being alive -- and why we think we have to earn it in the first place.
Probably the most accurate and most depressing moment came when he was so grateful to be "promoted" to a bigger square with a view of the bridge.
You might be correct, because I was expecting some big reveal, like somebody judging for being materialistic or questioning his life choices.
I thought he was going to get promoted again to an even big box 📦 that is bigger than the two boxes combined.
I mean, it was a pretty big square. You could even see the bridge from their! Nice breeze too
😢
That's when I got the metaphor / what the film is about.
Profound movie. Simple but meaningful. Trading our best years for money at a meaningless job until we retire but are too old to do many things.
It’s sad we spend 40~50 years working in either a meaningless or well paying job only to retire and realize we have maybe 20~30 years left (and government is raising retirement age as we live longer).
🙋🏼
The reality of the majority
Only the minority discover the ideals of doing what they love for money
i found it short on explaining why everyone around him never aged. but good message. quitting my job tomorrow lol
@campbellzachc This was the only weakness in an otherwise excellent short film
@@greg6924 brilliant observation
I love how there's nothing more to the task. No subplot, nothing scary, cynical, or weird. It's just that: devoid of meaning. Really brings out the perspective.
I would think it’s the daily grind of life and working a job that holds no advancement.
@@pinsongorga8466
Great comparison 👍🏻
@pinsongorga8466 really? How can you tell?
@@pinsongorga8466 No advancement? Hell, he got a bigger square, a view and numerous raises.
@@RPRosen-ki2fk ~my comment is not specifically about the man in this Video. It is about the general working population working dead end jobs that do not have benefits, cost of living pay raises, acknowledgements, etc…
I love the fact that this happens right after they graduate.
The way the boss' walking away is the best thing I've ever seen. Massive kudos to people who worked on this gem.
that was wonky 😅
I laughed every single time he did😂😂
what is the significance of that i couldn't understand? it's a little over the top so i assumed it must've had a meaning but couldn't figure
@wiawaysb I'm guessing that the boss doesn't want to spend his them doing meaningless work and getting worn out by it and by the end of the short he has a whole lot less white hair because of it
@@wiawaysb the boss didn’t age at all. While the employee did. I assume standing in the square has some sort of ability to pause the aging of the boss. Which is something I’d bet most people would pay someone else for if it were real.
With that said he might have became an age addict and wastes zero time
Noticed how the boss never aged? I'm guessing it's symbolic of how your job never really comes to an end, even after you retire there will always be someone else to take your place...
Whoa that’s deep. Thanks for that insight.
I think this is more about selling time. You sell yours so the boss doesn't have to spend his.
I half a more "Twilight Zone-y" thing there. Like the boss to be revealed as the Devil (or something), fooling the man into giving up his entire life & all the experiences and good he COULD have done.
Or something like that.
But leaving it more "flat & unexplained", probably makes it more impactful.
The boss is industry personified. Hence his robotic walk that’s almost a caricature, how he speeds off to the next task. Industry never ages or stops; the corporation never ages. Its people age
I thought it meant the company continues even if you don't
I can definitely see another POV to this story: A man, sitting inside a room in one of the buildings, looking outside.
He does nothing but watch the "full-time man". And right at the end, we see it's just an empty room, and he's also inside a square.
That’s very ‘watching a guy push a button’ in Lost
I love it
That would have been great!
Powerful
So, the first Saw movie.
Like a supervisor?
And just like real life for most, when he retired there was no fanfare or party. The boss just accepted his resignation and walked away. He’ll have someone else standing in the square the next day.
For a sec I thought he was gonna trade his watch for feet pics
I think the girl with the colorful hair thought so too, hence her apprehension, lol
Hahahaha 😂 that is not what I was expecting but close. I thought he was gonna tell her about the podiatrist story from before lol
LMAO
LOL… Me too 😂👍😂
Feet pics would've been more useful to him at this point 🤣🤣🤣
The boss dressing up as a clown at home opens up space for interpretations and subtly hints at the sacrifices we make, often giving up valuable aspects of our lives for work. I think it shows that people have two sides: their serious work self and their true, fun side that's kept private. Just like the main character who returns to skateboarding, the boss in a clown costume suggests that even those in power may be forsaking their genuine passions. It's a reminder that there's more to everyone than what we see and that in the pursuit of success, we might be letting go of things that truly matter to us.
as he looked in the window the clown was a reflection of himself , it's simple , no need to read too much into it ,
I got the impression at first that boss was a mildly evil task master, but after seeing him with that thing on his beard, I wondered if that was grey hair or a bit of makeup. That gave me the impression that he was just doing what he had to.
It's weird that 1 person aged, but not the other...even though the scenery didn't appear to change. I got the impression that the people of the world didn't change.
I'd love for the creator to chime in.
@@eugenetswongthat's because ANYONE could be the boss. And probably over the years there were a lot of them.
well maybe it's his job
It's just like any customer service but with better pay.
It's so amazing that he didn't pay money for the skateboard but he gave his watch showing the importance of time😊
😮 good observation
I think it makes more sense to give his watch than money becuase it was his watch at which he was looking for everyday for 5:30 over the years and at the end it worth just nothing.
Very good observation
Can you please explain me story why the guy gave money to him what was the purpose
Brilliant. As someone currently involved in a 9 - 5 office grind and dreaming of more creative pursuits, this was one hell of a watch.
Dude, I know it's hard after a long day of work to get home and use some of your few precious hours to do something creative, but I assure you it can work out. The dream is worth it. It's never too late to turn things around but you have to put in some time every day.
You're an inspiration.
De 9 a 5. Presumidos. En Latinoamérica es de 6 a 5.
@@bryanpacheco3058será en tu caso, yo trabajo de 6 a 14 o de 7 a 15 y los sábados de 6 a 13.
@@tsuobachi you can think as much as you like that you can individually get out of slavery. But only together we are a force. Capitalism is misanthropic. communism or barbarism. There are no other ways.
I love how he appreciates the bigger square even though it sucks just as bad. I've worked in the same size cube for 20 years and, sadly, would probably react the same way to a bigger one.
The moral of the story is don't let work get in the way of your passion and life. I think
This is supposed to be about people working meaningless job their entire life and not actually enjoying life. All for money and by the time you are old and retire, you don't have the strength or health to do what you always wanted to do. Get out. Live life now.
This came in the exact moment... I need to get out of this Square and live as i always wanted 😢
Hell, I’m 70 and still stuck in my square.
Do what you need now before old age sets in (sooner than expected).😢
🙋🏼
Same man, same. This will be the year for both of us.
Me, too. I've been studying a 6 month Coursera course for over a year. I'm almost done.
Let's achieve something this year.
There is no square. You make your choices and either stay within the confines of the restrictions of those choices, either happily or unhappily, or make new ones and change your life. People tend to start blaming other things, like other people or “the system” when we’ve chosen to be powerless. We’re not.
No matter what you do, you will always be in a square... no way out. :-)
(that's another perspective)
The moral i take from this story. Don't let your life pass you by. He made a lot of money. But you can't take money with you. Live your life to the fullest you can. And if you live it right, you will leave behind you things that are priceless. He could have skateboarded to work every day, but he didn't. So he lost his ability, and couldn't skateboard when he retired. Don't become just another cog in the machine. Live, Love, and act like every day is your last. Because it might be!
I agree! He could have skate boarded when he was off work too but he didn't. Working has never taken over my life. Even when I worked a 4:00pm-11:00pm job I still made time with my friends, went out on the weekends, took time off for family fun or vacation.
Sometimes you have to judge a Omeleto film by the viewer comment section. I'd say by that measure this was one hell of a good film. Props to the writer and director of this film ... WELL DONE.
Yup.
It's like what is good art?
Good art is what gets people talking whether you like it or not.
@@dougaltolan3017not about liking or disliking,
It's more about the understanding, questioning or the depth it added in your thinking
I would never subscribe to that metric. For me 'good art' is sincere art; the poorly-executed scrawls of a child done over the course of hours or days qualifies. There's all kinds of art 'lots of people like', that I don't like.@@dougaltolan3017
I like this short film. It really captures the essence of most jobs where your work really isn't important and quite frankly wastes the most valuable time in your life. And after years and years of loyalty and dedication, the most you could hope for is maybe an hour or two of partying with your old co-workers for your retirement party. Life will pass you buy as you stand in your square and friends will fade away. Go live life as much as you can while you still can.
No me quedo muy claro por qué el joven se ve más viejo que el jefe y el jefe sigue igual a que hace referencia esto ???
Staying inside the box whilst trying hard to think outside the box, the metaphor of life. Full Time is an insightful short film that conveys lost time. Hats off to John Ryan Sugimoto
This resonated with me on so many levels. Redundant, unfulfilling job. Working for a clown. Feeling dismissed and underappreciated. Wasting my life away at a job that has no meaning and watching others live life. LIFE!
Walk away from the clowns, the sideshows, the circus!!! Don’t let anybody put you in a box. Dare to be different, be the glitch in the matrix. Imagine if we all did this…
That's what American work culture is like for so many. This one really hit home for me.
Yes this is life. We give up things for money when we have jobs.
And standing in that square was a great paying job to begin with. I’ve worked since I was 14 years old, and I still don’t make $72,000/yr. In real life you gotta eat and pay your bills, and some of us stand in that square for a lot less because we have to. Dude got a pretty great gig straight out of school if you ask me.
@@racheeerach How did the dude last without supplies that long? Dude must have been very skilled to get the gig.
@@johndinner4418 By going home after the shift. He didn't live there.
So well done- when I noticed some gray hair at the temples of the kid in the middle of the movie, I simply thought the actor was older than the part he was playing. Now I realize that was a nice touch - to which I was completely oblivious!!! Thanks for an entertaining short film!!!
Oh, my heart is sobbing. I know how that feels. Heartbreaking! He stayed in that box like a prisoner. Poor guy. 😢
I've been unemployed for over a year now and have been beating myself up for quitting a very toxic workplace and not being 'productive' by getting another job done then. This film is bittersweet and changes the perspective of the rat-race to that what a lot of our corporate jobs really do to us, make us idle away our time.
Andrew Lutheran played the role of Michael so beautifully. There was something tragic about him, so naive and authentic, simple yet rich. Looking forward to seeing him in more roles. Well done all.
Creator here; I love seeing peoples reactions to this film but mostly the speculation on why the man doesn’t age. There definitely is an explanation to it all but for now I love seeing what everyone thinks. I’ll come back with the explanation at about 100k views. For now keep the theories comin!
Andrew Lutheran out here KILLING IT 🔥
Explanation?
This is life for every working class member of society, we just don't realize it until someone shows us.
I want to make this a part of my new hire training. Show every kid coming out of college this, and then office space. I used to show office space in training on Fridays to lighten the load. But I remind them this is closer to a documentary than a comedy
This movie is so strangely real. I am 60 years old and I still skateboard, but I gave up a meaningless life doing other people's bidding for money years ago. I am a free spirit, who was once trapped in the rat race of nothingness. Now, I live out of my VW bus surfing, skating, and doing only my own hearts desire. Terrific film!
60 years and still surfing😮😮
You have not truly watched Omeleto if you didn't visit the comments section. Another banger, as we will say in Nigeria.
Thank you and fantastic work to Mr. Sugimoto. I truly needed to see this film at thie moment, to force me to take stock of what my life has become and push me to make the decisions I know I have to in order to improve it.
Not so different from me, I’ve sat my arse in the front of airplanes for over forty years now as my life passed me by. And I too was pleased when I got a bigger airplane to sit in, for about a month!
It was not skateboarding that I gave up but all the surf trips to Indonesia that I didn’t go on because I was busy sitting in an airplane, which has little more intrinsic value than standing in a square.
Brought me to tears. Brilliant. One of my favorites.
2:48 The way that guy walked away had me laughing for some reason lol.
He never ages either which is weird, i thought he was a robot or alien . I'm still trying to figure out this whole plot .
lol I thought I was crazy for laughing at the way he walked off
@@gemstar7286 Yeah, I tried looking for another review but there wasn't one on YT.
@@gemstar7286I think guy is representing corporation which doesn't age fast.
The time goes by very fast in this square.
This sent tears rolling down my face. I promised my younger self 30+ years ago to NEVER stop skating. While I still have several boards and get one out occasionally, this reminded me of how "life" too often gets in the way of the things that bring us true happiness. Of course, it's a balancing act; but make sure it doesn't get out of balance. Neal Unger is truly inspirational. Thanks for this, Omeleto!!!
❤️
This is why it's important to do what u love and do what you want, at all costs
Sure until bill,s come and then THEY trow u out of they house if u pay tax(rent) it,s not your,s.
U will own nothing and be happy abut it
Feels like life every day. Thanks for sharing this. Nailed it. Good job!
Loved it 😊
Especially the scene with the woman asking for help and him not helping because he had to stay in his square got me thinking. She was saying something like "you could help, but you don't" and I'm wondering what i give priority to instead of actually helping someone that i could help if I'd get outside my (mental) square...
Lots of incidents happenned where employees trying to help people in need, but end up getting fired by their employer.
This is one of my favourite short movies. It's simple but well done.
I do understand the message of this film, but the reality is that he was not working 24/7...after his 8 hrs shift, he has his life back...whatever he did with that time WAS A CHOICE.
yea, it was not that bad.
Be happy with small things is what this feels like...
He lived his whole life in a small box for high return of money, but never actually experienced anything fun. For all that he earned I wouldn't call his life satisfying or fulfilling. So I would rather earn less and have a fulfilling life.
A lot could depend on what he did after work 🤷🏼
@@MrKim-kv2vv Exactly maybe he had fun as an old man
@@justingary5322 yeah but for a lot of people you can't do much, your mind gets foggier, new things seem harder, you're a lot less physically capable
Very grateful for making such videos and giving some other prospective to see life❤❤
As a corporate pen-pusher I hated this so much. Thankfully, my workplace provides 4 weeks holiday a year (this is a mandate in Australia) , with an option of 'purchasing' up to an extra 4 weeks annually. We also have long service leave every 10 years (mine's only 2 years away!) where we get 3 months paid leave. But yeah, even now, I take a holiday usually twice a year, and our managers actually encourage it!
nice square... enjoy it!...
Hey Bec. I'm in Tassie. It's great to have the Aussie perks compared to some of so called greatest countries. Don't forget the leave loading. 🙂
Looks like a beautiful square...i hope you have fun
If y'all are saying square negatively, which maybe you aren't, how do you propose 7+ billion people make a living if not finding a job?
@@peterlenza8320 my take is that it’s meant in a snarky way, as well. If so, gotta be some Gen Z’s living in mom and dad’s basement.
This movie is a gem. Simple, yet powerful! Thanks
So why couldn't he go skateboarding after work?
Full time job
Maybe because this video was made from the perspective of someone who never had full time job.
Bro it's a metaphor
Work takes up all of your room and energy
I work 10 to 12 hour days and can still get in a little time for hobbies. I get the message they want to get across, but it wasn't done super well, lol.
This was out of this planet, so well produced! Look at the screenplay for instance... 💖
Mind-blowing commentary on how some people get sucked in working for clowns, locked into the mundane corporate mindset the wastes your life, regardless of the pay. Beautiful, your mind is blown when the old man's face comes onscreen ( longest time jump since 2001 space odessey! ) and great ending the old man falling,and the quick cut.
Wow this made me cry. So many people sacrifice the best years of their life for a future that’s not even guaranteed.
Who is here after abhi ka review 😅😅😩😩😩
Me
😁😁😂😂 im
Main bhi 😂
Me too 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
What is abhi insta id?
Well done! It’s amazing how such a simple concept can deliver such a powerful message. Filmmaking / storytelling at its best.
Who's Here After Facts Maava Recommendation
Me
Finally, someone decided to make a film on today's work life. Amazing acting and direction.
It highlights all the meaningless jobs people work just to trade their time on Earth for money.
The most sad and depressing scene 14:11 and this film left me with lots of whys
One of the best Short I have seen in my entire Life! Thank U!
Can you please explain me story why the guy gave money to him what was the purpose
"Full Time" really resonated for me .... I forced myself to retire, almost a year & a half ago ... I chose to retire, in spite of the (sort of) 'good' money, my extensive experience, & my 'value' to my increasingly younger employers (they protested), & my co-workers .... 48 years w/ fairly good career, lucky me ... even though the best parts were over 20 years ago .... for most of us, there are always trade-offs ... obvious sacrifices, working in boxes ... & I'm still blessed w/ some of my creative, personal pursuits, the few of which I just never let go ... but my remaining abilities, my remaining health, my remaining friends & family ... just not a lot to work w/ anymore ... life is full of choices ... but staying young & relatively carefree, is not really an option ... time waits for no one ... if you must work in a box, try your best to get a good one ... good luck
a true parable of life...we all exchange hours for dollars. live life while you can!!!
Not "all" of us.
The thought experiment I used to ask people was "how much would it take for you to work at a job where your job is to sit at a computer and press the R button repeatedly, 8 hours/day, 50 weeks/year?" How long would you last? Would you go insane? I don't even think for a million dollars anyone would be able to survive with their sanity. At least the guy in this film got to people watch all day! But still soul sucking.
you should’ve added the caveat that if they refuse the job, they become homeless. I can only imagine it would vastly reduce their lowest wage
I could work it an entire year. Save up the money and follow a passion with the money I saved. Some jobs are just means to an end.
There are many jobs that are little more than that. Have you seen production line work?
I could manage that easy.
@@dougaltolan3017 exactly. If I’m allowed to listen to audible or podcasts it’s a piece of piss. Just zone out
I'd automate that job lol
A nice take on how soul-sucking jobs force you to trade your time in exchange for money. Time is the only true asset we have, spend it wisely.
I was shocked to see he'd aged an old man , by standing in a square on the floor for all those years for just money . it isn't worth it . And what's with the guy and the clown persona , and he never gets old .
@@gemstar7286 but he has gotten older. @12:26 you see the undyed patched. Dyed hair is a cover for aging in a world that values youth.
@@gemstar7286
Yea, I kinda thought the writers would have use a “spinning” effect to simulate time passing.
@@pinsongorga8466
My thought was leftover clown makeup. Your interpretation makes more sense.
🙋🏼
@@pinsongorga8466 His face still looks exactly the same, there's no wrinkles. Whereas the other guy has become wrinkled and very old.
Brilliant choice to ring in the new year, Omeleto. 🔲🥳💃
brilliant. poignant. glad I learnt this lesson years ago. bravo to all involved - thank you
Now you need to learn to stop hoarding.
@@Elbereth42 wtf??
This looks like my life from past 5 years..
Seems to me you are just starting in the works world. If so, you’re still young and should be making your life goal decisions now. You’ll either work for someone or work for yourself, you’ll still need to work 40 more years and continue to get older.
🙋🏼
That's us, wage slaves working for clowns. All too soon we're old. Nicely told.
What a short, super accurate description 👍🏻
Such a brilliant analogy with so much truth.
As someone who is homeless and broke I would take this job, but I would quit before I became to old to enjoy liffe.
This is brilliantly simple, trading your time on earth for money. Love the way he gave away his corporate watch for the one thing he loved..a skateboard. This should be played in schools 😂
My life summed up nicely in 15mins. Brilliant short movie, powerful and so meaningful. Trading time for a meaningless job, how many of are stuck in such a position? And, before we realise, we have already lost our best years.
He noticed at the same time I noticed that he was the only one aging. Look at how much of his life he let wither away and all he wanted was the small things in life 😢 reality is, we are doing more working to live than actual living. This was great, I love it here
Love it, and totally fell in love with the characters!! Great work all around on this film.
Love these short movies
I like this, because it encourages us to think without being pretentious.
@ 4:22 It flet like some kind of invisible wall of separation between him & them.
Dude who was working:
'i'm working' than one of his friends :
"is even anyone watching you?"
That Literally blew my mind away.
I am watching this short movie after watching video of abhi ka review
I think the reason the boss or nothing really aged or changed was because nothing really changes. People or most of us will be hamsters in the wheel so no matter what day, month or year it is, it will always be the same with no change. Our children take over after we are gone
The injury at the end.😁I liked this very much.Tells a great story and makes you think.Choices.Well, done.Impressed❤
I have to be honest. I was worried he would hurt himself on the skateboard and not have insurance to go to the hospital since he just left his job.
@@racheeerach 😄😄😄Love it.❤️
kudos, so very glad that I stayed true to myself ... coming and going from contract work to do the things I enjoy!
There is only one life, live it now!
Michael Tucker is a loyal square-sitter like many of us!
Oh man if this isn’t the most accurate summary of life I don’t know what is. Pretty depressing… ☹️
Such a compelling movie, loved it!
At 61yrs, I just started my first FT office gig. I'd been lucky, and I figure I can sucked it up and bite the bullet for 8-10 in order to have a nice retirement. Idk if it's tragic or beautiful, but it's truly not all that different from this guy.
there's never been an omeleto movie that i didn't find enjoyable, you guys kill it every time
Very thought-provoking film
Abhi ka review>> ❤
This is too deep....I'm quiting my job
Very scary to me personally. I am closing in on retirement and other than my kids, I have accomplished nothing and now only work to survive, especially now in this new horrible world. Good little movie though, but sad.
I have recently retired. I am very grateful not to have to put up with the hellscape that is now corporate America or even a basic job. Take time to enjoy the simple things and your family. Many people get all or pass away before they are ever able to enjoy retirement.
This deserves a thousand thumbs up. So true
Me after Watching Abhi ka Review Recommendation 😁😅
There was a time when the boss was offering him new opportunities a bigger square i thought that was because he had thoughts of quitting the job .. But the boss realised that and gave him a bigger square and 30 % increment making the man mute again 😬
He never said what he really felt from inside that he want to quit the job and do what he really wanted to do
Best lesson in 5 mins hats off guyss ❤️
A nice mix of absurdity, poetry and great phylisophic reflexions !
The end had me sobbing 😭, like this was such a good representation of how our jobs drain us and we do it all for the pay. How we miss all the years that pass us by, along with the fun opportunities we pass on, and its just sad how thats what we're wired to do.
The people that made this film chose not to live in that square. And for that, I'm thankful for the reminder that there are others like me that see the square from the outside.
Imagine working in a shop producing furniture and one day you discover that each day, everything you made was taken away in a truck and dumped into a landfill.
Bruh I almost cried when he fell off the skateboard near the end.
Interesting take on life. One thing I have seen so far in my life is a myriad of complaints but not much change. It's up to us to do this. No point in complaining, just start making the changes.
$200 a day to start, you leave at 5:30. Where do I sign up for this?
Extremely sad but thought provoking. This old lady enjoyed it, although enjoyed is not perhaps the right word.
I know you are here after" ABHI KA REVIEW " 😅😅
Never heard of it lol
You can have time.
You can have money.
Very few of us can have both.
Work - Life Balance, people.
If you can afford it.
(Love the office cubicle being abstracted to a square on a public plaza.)
Life is free, what's to afford? Work?
@@dougaltolan3017 life is free, true. But a comfortable life isn't
The best I've ever seen.
An amazing metaphor for working in the corporate world, I just wish I knew why the boss wasn't aging like Mike
I wondered that too, then thought maybe it's because at a certain point in our work careers, we realize our bosses are younger than us.
I think its because the boss doesn't matter literally; he is a representation of the corporation that hired him, and they remain as they do from the moment we are hired to the moment we leave. The goodbye was cold, but not unkind. The raise was simply because it was time. It was not a man, but a company.
Yeah I think as well that , the boss was a symbolic representation of the corporation.He never aged because corporations live beyond our human lives.Also he dressed as a clown thus a joker a trickster who is having the last laugh by sucking out the best years of your life.