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Office

Original title: Hua li shang ban zu
  • 2015
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Chow Yun-Fat in Office (2015)
Trailer for Office
Play trailer0:39
1 Video
4 Photos
ComedyMusicalRomance

A musical set mainly in a corporate high-rise. Two assistants, Lee Xiang and Kat, start new jobs at the financial firm Jones & Sunn. Lee Xiang is an earnest young man who naively enters the ... Read allA musical set mainly in a corporate high-rise. Two assistants, Lee Xiang and Kat, start new jobs at the financial firm Jones & Sunn. Lee Xiang is an earnest young man who naively enters the world of high finance with noble intentions. Kat on the other hand has a secret.A musical set mainly in a corporate high-rise. Two assistants, Lee Xiang and Kat, start new jobs at the financial firm Jones & Sunn. Lee Xiang is an earnest young man who naively enters the world of high finance with noble intentions. Kat on the other hand has a secret.

  • Director
    • Johnnie To
  • Writer
    • Sylvia Chang
  • Stars
    • Sylvia Chang
    • Chow Yun-Fat
    • Eason Chan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Johnnie To
    • Writer
      • Sylvia Chang
    • Stars
      • Sylvia Chang
      • Chow Yun-Fat
      • Eason Chan
    • 6User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos1

    Office
    Trailer 0:39
    Office

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast48

    Edit
    Sylvia Chang
    Sylvia Chang
    • Winnie Chang
    Chow Yun-Fat
    Chow Yun-Fat
    • Ho Chung Ping
    Eason Chan
    Eason Chan
    • David Wang
    Tang Wei
    Tang Wei
    • Sophie
    Ziyi Wang
    Ziyi Wang
    • Lee Xiang
    Yueting Lang
    Yueting Lang
    • Kat Ho
    Eddie Cheung
    Eddie Cheung
    • John Sun
    • (as Siu-Fai Cheung)
    Tien-Hsin
    Tien-Hsin
    • Tang Kah-Ling
    Stephanie Che
    Stephanie Che
    • Cheng Ben
    Timmy Hung
    Timmy Hung
    • Howard Ye
    Kin-Kwan Chu
    • Kevin Shen
    Adrian Wong
    Adrian Wong
    • Tong Dong Mei
    Catherine Chau
    Catherine Chau
    • Supervisor of Public Relations Dept.
    Mimi Chi-Yan Kung
    Mimi Chi-Yan Kung
    • Ho Chung Ping's wife
    Hoi-Pang Lo
    Hoi-Pang Lo
    • Lobby Security Guard
    Philip Keung
    Philip Keung
    • Stock Broker
    Amy Fan
    • Lawyer Ip
    Vincent Sze
    Vincent Sze
    • Auditor
    • Director
      • Johnnie To
    • Writer
      • Sylvia Chang
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews6

    6.11K
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    Featured reviews

    9christa-pelc

    Flashy and fun!

    Wow, the costumes are lavish, the music superb and the story is engaging. This is the story of an office romance, a divided family, a deception and many power struggles. What more could you want?
    8mehobulls

    Out w/ the Jean-Pierre Melville, in w/ the Frank Tashlin! Long live cinema!

    Experimental, fun & disconcerting. The office metallic structure is open & vertical, it's governed by a giant clock; people are moving inside it like coucou figures; one particular scene in all glass translucent restaurant where the employees have gathered for a drink seems borrowed from a hive of swarming bees. Actors are in motion frenzy; this is not a time to probe feelings; what you see is all what there is
    6moviexclusive

    A clear example of style over substance, Johnnie To's musical-drama is visually impressive but narratively empty

    At a ripe old age of 60, Hong Kong's gangster noir master Johnnie To seems to have mellowed. In place of hard-boiled male-driven films like 'The Mission', 'Election' and 'Exiled', To has preached about the corruptibility of money in 'Life Without Principle', broken his cardinal rule against sequels in favour of a sappy slapstick rom-com in 'Don't Go Breaking My Heart 2', and is now doing a full-fledged musical about corporate politics. 'Office', adapted by Sylvia Chang from her own hit play 'Design for Living', is probably the most uncharacteristic Johnnie To film we have seen to date, though it is also hardly one of his best, be it from a critical or commercial standpoint.

    As with her play, Chang stars as the high-powered CEO named Winnie of the lucrative company Jones & Sunn that is about to launch its IPO. Established early in the narrative is that Winnie used to be the Chairman's secretary, and that their relationship goes beyond that of a mentor and a mentee. Indeed, it is an open secret among the company's rank and file employees that Winnie is Chairman Ho Chung-ping's (Chow Yun Fat) lover, and it is also hinted later on that his comatose wife (Mimi Kung) whom he visits regularly in hospital with a bouquet of flowers has never quite gotten over his affair. On the other hand, his bright Harvard-graduate daughter Kat (Long Yueting) has just joined the company as an ordinary employee, in order to give her an opportunity to prove her worth to her fellow colleagues.

    Though Winnie was a pivotal lead character in the stage version, Chang's screenplay instead cedes more time to three other characters – her vice CEO David Wang (Eason Chan), a bold but impetuous go- getter who has been using the company's money to dabble in stocks; the company's financial controller Sophie (Tang Wei), who has just been dumped by her fiancé back in China because she keeps putting off their marriage in fear that it would affect her career progression; and last but not least, Li Xiang (Wang Liyi), an eager bright-eyed new employee whom Winnie favours to David's resentment and who has a thing for the Chairman's daughter Kat. Their collective fates unfold against the backdrop of the looming Lehman crisis in 2008, with profound ramifications on both the company and its employees.

    Commendable though it may be for Chang to reduce her role in order to give voice to the other characters occupying different strata of the company hierarchy, the absence of a lead character unfortunately makes for several under-developed subplots that don't quite flow or blend into each other. David comes off as the most fully formed character of the lot, but his tryst with Winnie and subsequent manipulation of Sophie in the midst of her emotional meltdown lacks credibility. Ditto for Li Xiang's attraction towards Kat, which isn't given a raison d'être beyond love at first sight. But most lamentable is the relationship between Chung-ping and Winnie, which has been condensed into a handful of scenes with both exchanging knowing looks at each other during some corporate event or with Winnie staring wistfully at pictures of Chung-ping on her desktop.

    Without enough time to properly develop these intricate workplace relationships, To struggles to find the right tone for his blend of office drama and satire. On one hand, the musical numbers strike a comic note on the grind of the everyday work life; on the other, the rest of the film want to portray in all seriousness the different corporate archetypes, whether the over-achieving newcomer, the brash yet insecure senior management executive, or the shrewd but Machiavellian head honcho. That uneasy balance falls apart in the third act as To tries to build towards a finale that is meant to bring both reckoning and closure for the characters, what dramatic resonance in the proceedings sadly undercut by the frivolity of some musical numbers that seem awkwardly inserted to lighten the mood.

    These flaws however do not diminish the film's technical accomplishments, of which there are many. For one, the US$6.3 million set designed by William Chang on which the whole film was filmed is impressive to say the very least, especially the open- concept office space comprising one floor of orderly rows of tables and chairs and two converging staircases leading to the upper floor where the CEO's office is. Much thought has also been put into the visual design, which aims for a clean-cut minimalist look that either does away with opaque walls altogether or makes them transparent. In that respect, the staging (pardon the pun) feels almost as if we were watching actors on a stage, performing in a series of interconnected cells defined by thin metal bars and brightly lit florescent tubes.

    As unique as 'Office' may be amidst To's oeuvre, it will likely not be remembered among one of his best. That has largely to do with Chang's script, which tries to balance too many characters at the same time and ends up being unwieldy in the process. It also lacks the clarity of purpose and voice as his best films, unable to decide if it wants its message to take away a serious moral message like 'Life Without Principle' or simply be entertained like 'Don't Go Breaking My Heart 2'. It ends up doing neither well, and instead coming off better as a technically accomplished exercise full of style but somewhat lacking in substance. Oh yes, it is pretty to look at, but it is ultimately also pretty empty inside.
    5yoggwork

    There are many helpless plots in the workplace. I really feel the same.

    There are many helpless plots in the workplace. I really feel the same. The junior clerk at the bottom can't see the day to come. The exaggerated scenery is a failure, although it is to match the performance situation of singing and dancing. Perhaps the story will be more plain, more direct and more touching.
    6norbert-plan-618-715813

    Brilliant and boring

    Johnnie To may be an ace in directing and exploiting the settings, usually the streets of cities, and Hong Kong in particular, but here it is the offices of a financial company in Hong Kong, and here the film is visually impressive and Johnnie To fully grasps this universe and this set of sets, stairs, glass walls. But this ensemble leaves us unmoved, without any empathy for the characters, in whom we are unable to take an interest. Is it because it is a musical, a real one? Maybe, because we fully admit to be insensitive to this style.

    We can see that Johnnie To is making fun of the financial world and of these characters who all wear the same uniform and whose preoccupations are purely financial and who spend their time lying to each other.

    Nevertheless, the film is brilliant on the form. And it is always surprising to see Chow Yun-Fat without a gun in his hand!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film takes place in 2008.
    • Soundtracks
      He Bi Ne
      Music by Ta-Yu Lo

      Lyrics by Xi Lin

      Performed by Eason Chan

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 2, 2015 (China)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • Hong Kong
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Cantonese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Johnnie To's Office
    • Production companies
      • Beijing Hairun Pictures Company
      • Edko Films
      • Media Asia Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $63,675
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $34,144
      • Sep 20, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,290,521
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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