Bleecker Street | Release Date: January 31, 2020
5.3
USER SCORE
Mixed or average reviews based on 91 Ratings
USER RATING DISTRIBUTION
Positive:
44
Mixed:
18
Negative:
29
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5
JLuis_001Apr 30, 2020
I might get some **** for saying this but part of this film felt like a cheap narrative resource grab because the Me Too movement was in a very algid point when the film was produced.
And I say this not because I felt the film was bad but
I might get some **** for saying this but part of this film felt like a cheap narrative resource grab because the Me Too movement was in a very algid point when the film was produced.
And I say this not because I felt the film was bad but because it doesn't go anywhere. The approach is so slow and unsatisfying.

I liked the perspective because it usually doesn't get exposed in this way but it also feels too minimalist for its own good.
I mean it exposes the toxic environment women have to face in the workplace but it doesn't further the discussion at all.
So in a way I kinda wonder why a story like this one that needed more depth doesn't go to the places in needs to go.

Julia Gardner's sober performance and the relevance of the theme will save this film from immediate oblivion but in my opinion; The Assistant doesn't manage to make the statement I feel it believes is making and the end result unfortunately fails to exploit its potential
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3 of 7 users found this helpful34
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5
ChrisM1979Feb 3, 2020
It wasn't a bad movie. But it wasn't really a good movie either. I found it watchable and interesting enough on a moment to moment basis but when it ended a few people laughed and one guy said out loud "That's it?"
Stories have a beginning a
It wasn't a bad movie. But it wasn't really a good movie either. I found it watchable and interesting enough on a moment to moment basis but when it ended a few people laughed and one guy said out loud "That's it?"
Stories have a beginning a middle and an end. This movie just had a middle.
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3 of 7 users found this helpful34
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6
NightReviewsFeb 27, 2020
Welcome! Have a seat.

As normal a greeting as could be, yet, the ramifications of such words hold such heavy and enduring provocations in Kitty Green’s feature film debut The Assistant. Fairly new to the narrative feature film world,
Welcome! Have a seat.

As normal a greeting as could be, yet, the ramifications of such words hold such heavy and enduring provocations in Kitty Green’s feature film debut The Assistant. Fairly new to the narrative feature film world, Australian born Kitty Green gives audience members a documentarian style, “day in the life of” type film, shadowing the daily routine life of Jane (Julia Garner). Jane is a highly stressed, over-worked, entry-level assistant to an unnamed film mogul in New York City.

Seems like pretty regular stuff, right? Yet, Green’s Assistant is nothing short of extraordinary, yet completely relatable and ordinary to so many people watching it. Doused in elements of film-noir, to elements of an extreme thriller, The Assistant is a bold and brave new voice at the dawn of the #MeToo era of socially conscious, gender-inclusive filmmaking. And while the coincidences of the Harvey Weinstein case are hard to shake while watching each and every gripping frame of this film, it becomes a double-edged sword, of sorts, for Green’s chilling message. Yes, the obvious similarities to the once-famed and respected film mogul are apparent, yet this translucent piece of cinema is neither a documentation or reimagining of the obscenities of that one person, rather a realization that such small, impactful and everyday choices are heralded everyday, in every office, every workplace and happens or has happened to each and every one of us, regardless of gender.

Gathering the voices and stories of so many nameless individuals, as well as her own experiences in the world of film, Green uses subtle little anecdotes of each and every one of us, to relay a story as timeless as it is timely.

Stressed with on-going mundane tasks, Jane is subjected to so many responsibilities at her place of employment. From shifting schedules, booking hotels, travel arrangements and lying regularly to people over the phone, Jane’s good-hearted and innocent spirit is constantly battling and struggling with her own moral compass. Yet, with every opportunity of being kind-hearted, loyal and honest, her actions are almost immediately overmanned and undermined with character degrading emails to her boss, apologizing and asking for his forgiveness. Sentences such as, “I overreacted”, “It was not my place”, or “”I will not let you down again”, flood the screen of Jane’s emails. But Green is much more interested in the tiny actions much more than the larger melodrama filling most multiplexes today.

Like many classics thrillers, including Psycho and Rear Window, the notion that what’s shown off-screen will always be scarier than what we see on-screen; Green takes notes from these masterclass directors and shows her confidence in her actors and screenplay, allowing the heavy words and off-screen actions to thrill, disturb and keep the audience’s imagination constantly churning. While its hard to ignore the not-so-subtle messages being yelled towards the screen, the whole concept of ignoring what is right in front of you, and being ignored, are both very complex aspects of The Assistant. As an audience, we ask ourselves, “What can we do?”, if we were in Jane’s position, or if, we are in fact, in Jane’s position right NOW. Then, question like, “what do we do?” are the questions left flooding our own heads.

The Assistant, although casted with gendered actors, is a genderless and mandatory “fly-in-the-soup” type cinematic experience. The audience can easily imagine the role of Jane being a male, and the mogul role being a female, or both males or female characters, interchangeably. The genders portrayed in the films are as irrelevant as exactly what happens behind closed doors in each and every one of those offices. What matters most is the actions we take, even when our actions sometimes have no real ramifications or resolve. A challenge seen when Jane approaches Mr. Willcock, her HR department head, who, without hesitation, completely ignores her very strong cases of obvious sexual misconduct in the workplace, involving, none of than the commander-in-chief. Yet, like so many other nameless faces before and after Jane, instead of facing issues presented by disgruntled employees because of people in high place of power, these people who are hired to enact action and take the positions of the workers, threatens her position within the company; implying that he thought she was “smart”, as well as reminding her as competitive her position is and how she was chosen amongst so many other women who applied. Yet, throughout the film, through conversations Jane has with her parents, friends and family, constantly remind and encourage her just how “proud” they are of the position she has earned, and being constantly brainwashed just by how much of a great opportunity this is for her and her potential future.
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1 of 3 users found this helpful12
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4
ManganMay 3, 2020
This film was essentially a fairly dry series of carefully constructed and didactic scenes spelling out topical and well publicised abuses of power, amounting to very little by the time the curtain came down.
1 of 6 users found this helpful15
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4
michaelc1024Aug 1, 2020
I was hoping for this really good entertaining movie and I didn’t like it one bit.
0 of 3 users found this helpful03
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6
vitortfvJan 24, 2021
Perhaps it could be approached in another way, because looking at the film in general it is very linear, and perhaps that is the message that the director wanted to convey. However, the protagonist's anguish and sadness about the life shePerhaps it could be approached in another way, because looking at the film in general it is very linear, and perhaps that is the message that the director wanted to convey. However, the protagonist's anguish and sadness about the life she leads at work is very clear, not noticed by anyone, besides living in an environment composed mostly of men and being controlled by them. This linear form of the plot is what can keep many people from watching. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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