Heeeeey, Troper. What's happening? Yeah, I'm gonna need you to go ahead and describe Office Space here. If you could get that done by Monday, that'd be greeeeeaaaat. Mmkay?A comedy by Mike Judge, Office Space introduced us to the world of Initech, a soul-crushingly inane software company presided over by Bill Lumbergh, a soul-crushingly inane boss obsessed with TPS Reports — a soul-crushingly inane bit of paperwork — who is slowly driving employee Peter Gibbons out of his mind.Then Peter gets de-stressed by a dose of hypnotherapy and stops caring about his job. Soon after that, some outside consultants interview him, trying to find people to lay off. Instead of puffing up his importance, Peter tells them exactly how the bloated bureaucracy of the company stops him from ever doing anything. The consultants, of course, take this as sheer brilliance. Peter is fast-tracked for a promotion, but also discovers that two of his only friends, Michael and Samir, are going to be getting the axe. When he shares the news, the three decide to do the only logical thing — rob the company.They come up with A Simple Plan, but fail to notice a few very important details, and everything starts to spiral out of control.
Office Space contains examples of the following tropes:
Actor Allusion: Gary Cole wears his ring from Crusade; presumably it's a class ring here.
Adaptation Expansion: Of the "Milton" animated shorts Mike Judge did for Saturday Night Live in the early 1990s, from which the characters of Milton and Lumbergh (who was unnamed at the time) were taken. The bit where Milton's stapler is taken away was lifted wholesale from the first short, and dialogue from the last two shorts (Milton being moved to the basement and being asked to take care of the cockroaches, respectively) was also used. For those who remember these shorts, it is ridiculously satisfying to see Milton finally burn down the building (and, in a deleted scene, kill Lumbergh) after having promised to do both for almost a decade.
Ad of Win: Blizzard took the scene where Lumbergh tries to talk to Peter in his cubicle while Peter just ignores him to play Tetris, and replaced the game on his screen with World of Warcraft. It worked perfectly.
That was actually true at the time the movie was released as well.
Bowdlerization: The redubs of swearing for network TV are truly terrible. They say "deep slime" instead of "deep shit" and "pound me into ash" instead of "pound me in the ass".
And Samir's incoherent swearing ("This is a fuck!") is changed into the equally incoherent "This is a suck!"
Buffy Speak: Joanna rants that Peter has become a "penny-stealing...wannabe criminal...man!"
Butt Monkey: Milton. He is told to move his desk around at least three times a week. It turns out he was laid off five years prior to the film, but no one ever told him and the payroll was never updated, meaning he kept getting a paycheck. Lumbergh decides not only to continue not telling him about his lack of employment, but move him to the basement. All the while Milton keeps coming in, wondering about his missing paycheck, and Lumbergh keeps on being an ass to him and not telling him any of the above.
The Cameo: An uncredited Mike Judge plays Joanna's passive-agressive boss.
Ceiling Banger: Peter and Lawrence's apartment walls are not very thick.
Chekhov's Gun: Subverted: The hypnotist faints before snapping his fingers, suggesting that Peter will return to normal after hearing a snap. This never happens, and he stays in his relaxed state until the effect wears off on its own.
Comedic Sociopathy: Fraud, embezzlement, and arson have never been so funny. Lampshaded by Joanna when she tells Peter off for thinking he's entitled to engage in antisocial behavior just because he doesn't like his job.
Fail O Sucky Name: Played twice with Samir Nagheenanajar and, of course, Michael Bolton:
Samir: No one in this country can ever pronounce my name right. It's not that hard: Na-ghee-na-na-jar. Nagheenanajar. Michael Bolton: Yeah, well, at least your name isn't Michael Bolton. Samir: You know, there's nothing wrong with that name. Michael Bolton: There *was* nothing wrong with it... until I was about twelve years old and that no-talent ass clown became famous and started winning Grammys. Samir: Hmm... well, why don't you just go by Mike instead of Michael? Michael Bolton: No way! Why should I change? He's the one who sucks!
If I Were a Rich Man: Peter and Lawrence have a discussion to this effect. Lawrence comes to the conclusion that he'd do "two chicks at the same time." Peter would "sit on [his] ass and do nothing" (that or do two chicks at the same time).
Why, they were updating bank software for Y2K, of course.
This might be missed by a lot of people since the movie referred to it as the "Year 2000 Problem," which is what it was called in computing circles before the Media got their hands on it. This was most likely intentionally done to make Peter's job sound all the more boring. And of course, in spite of the panic the Media stirred up over the event, Y2K was essentially an incredibly boring bit of debugging.
Inventor Of The Mundane: Tom Smykowski uses the settlement from a car accident to fund the invention of his "Jump to Conclusions" mat ("Have a problem? Just take out the mat and jump to a conclusion!"). In universe, it was wildly successful.
Karma Houdini: All of the protagonists in that they get away with their attempted crime (although they also lose the money), but most notably Milton. He gets sick of his job and burns the place down, in the process finding thousands of dollars lying on the floor and escaping to a tropical resort. Subverted somewhat in that he seems to be equally miserable when he gets there.
Or maybe Milton was Initech's (or just Lumbergh's) karma. Their treatment of him was downright illegal.
Kill It with Fire: If you take his... his s-s-stapler he'll, he'll, he could... he'll set the building on fire.
Peter: When you come in on Monday and you're not feeling real well, does anyone ever say to you, "Sounds like someone has a case of the Mondays"? Lawrence: No... No! Shit, no, man. I believe you'd get your ass kicked saying something like that, man.
One Steve Limit: Averted with the consultants, both named Bob.
There's also a second, unseen character with the last name "Lumbergh."
And there is another Michael Bolton as well.
Parking Payback: The rear bumper of Lumbergh's Porsche is ripped off after he parks in the disabled space.
Percussive Therapy: Peter, Michael and Samir take the fax machine into a field and smash it to pieces with their feet and a baseball bat. Michael really gets into it.
Also, getting his desk moved to Storage B. "Well... okay. That's the last straw."
Really Gets Around: Joanna, according to Peter's obnoxious officemate Drew.
The Red Stapler: Trope Namer for the situation where a movie affects or creates a Real Life demand for an object, good or service. Swingline didn't make them when the movie was produced, but does now.
Refuge in Audacity: Do you really think Peter would have kept his job if he'd been less over-the-top?
Static Electricity: Peter gets a static shock from the door handle every day when he comes into work, and has grown to dread it. One way he illustrates his new in-control self is that he walks into work, borrows a power screwdriver from a maintenance worker and casually removes the handle.
He also has a habit of sighing as if really tired when requesting incredibly annoying things to do.
Visual Innuendo: When Lawrence tells Peter about his desire to do "two chicks at the same time," look at how he is holding his bottle of beer...
What, Exactly, Is His Job?: "What exactly would you say you do here?". Tom's interview with the Bobs does not go well.
And of course they find out that Milton doesn't even have a job at Initech.
White Collar Crime: The second half of the movie revolves around an attempt at it, though the protagonists aren't very good at it (they look up money laundering in the dictionary for starters), which is lampshaded by Michael:
Michael: "How is that all these stupid, Neanderthal mafia guys can be so good at crime, and smart guys like us can suck so badly?"