Working stiffs
Is it time to close The Office?

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/tv/story/2009/02/25/f-american-office.html


It wasn’t always this way — but now, there’s a moment in every episode
of the comedy series The Office that stimulates the irrational rage
centre of my brain. It happens every time paper salesmen Jim Halpert
(John Krasinski) looks knowingly at the camera and raises his
eyebrows, as if to say, “Do you get it? The comic absurdity of the
situation?” This once-fresh gesture — a cheeky acknowledgment of the
show’s mockumentary set-up — now feels like a bad habit borrowed from
the sitcom. It has become the visual equivalent of a corny
catchphrase.

The Office depicts the goings-on at the Scranton, Pa., paper company
Dunder-Mifflin. In its first few seasons, the series smartly
established itself as an independent entity and not just a pale cast
of the original British version, which debuted on the BBC in 2001. But
now, well into its fifth season, the American Office feels like it has
abandoned the discipline of the mock-doc format for the absurdity and
repetition that marks the classic sitcom. It’s morphed into a
skit-com.

The mockumentary form has thrived under the stewardship of a few
select visionaries. Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, creators of
the original Office, wisely chose to limit the series to two seasons
and two specials (14 episodes in all). More to the point, their
writing was smart. The show took a perspective on the workplace,
representing it as a colossal bore only enlivened by the eccentricity
of fellow co-workers. The principal characters were given a satisfying
arc — laughs didn’t come at the expense of characterization; they
followed from it.

For example, paper salesman Tim (Martin Freeman) and receptionist Dawn
(Lucy Davis) struggled with their feelings for one another and were
eventually united. By the close of the series, regional manager David
Brent (Gervais) had changed, too, becoming a slightly improved version
of his former self. After his humiliating dismissal, David made a
painful attempt to become the “chilled-out entertainer” that he always
claimed to be. Through failure, however, he discovered his better
nature. A credit to the skill of the writers, David won his redemption
with genre-appropriate profanity, telling his creepy pal Chris Finch
to eff off after he insulted Brent’s new girlfriend. The moment was —
and remains — one of the most potent declarations of affection made by
a comic lead.

The American version of The Office, however, has come to rely on
conventional sitcom gimmickry – every week, there’s some new high
jinks, and the characters do things that often don’t jibe with their
personalities. The show’s comic centre, boss Michael Scott (Steve
Carell), is spinning wildly off his axis. One week, he’s a creep,
attempting to have the harmless Toby arrested for drug possession; the
next week, he’s a weepy romantic, mourning the loss of recent amour
Holly. The show’s resident banana peel, Scott goes where this week’s
gag leads.

The writers’ initial interest in deriving humour from the mundane
tedium that characterizes most 9-to-5 jobs is now lost — and sadly
missed. So, too, is the original desire to reveal the comic
absurdities that define human relationships at work. Jim Halpert and
receptionist Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) are engaged, but that
semi-relatable coupling is often eclipsed by the yuk-heavy
Dwight/Angela/Andy tripling. Angela Martin (Angela Kinsey), the office
ice queen with a cat fetish, is engaged to the Barney Fife-like Andy
Bernard (Ed Helms) yet is having an affair with assistant to the
regional manager Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson). Sounds normal,
possibly interesting. Not really. The show writers use this little
plot point as an excuse for workplace duels and fake marriage
scenarios. Recent attempts to develop secondary characters like
supplier relations exec Meredith Palmer (Kate Flannery) also went
straight to wackytown with an in-office intervention (turns out
Meredith’s a drunk) and kidnapping.

The mockumentary conceit offers a fictionalized slice of life; the
jokes don’t come hot and fast but do a slow burn. A good mockumentary
makes you wonder if you should be laughing at all. By stressing the
joke above all else, the American version of The Office is beginning
to parallel When the Whistle Blows, the silly (fake) workplace comedy
that Gervais and Merchant mocked in their last series, Extras. There’s
very little difference between Jim Halpert’s consistent mugging for
the camera and Ray Stoke’s equally played-out catchphrase, “Is he
‘avin’ a laugh?” Wait, there is a difference: Stoke’s cheap laugh was
funny because Gervais used it ironically.

It seems to me that the mockumentary has a best-before date. Chris
Lilley’s Summer Heights High (HBO) is the most recent example of the
genre well used and even better understood. Spanning only eight
episodes, Lilley’s inspired view of the public education system in
Australia managed to be controversial, cruel, funny and poignant. The
story went somewhere, and it took its characters along for the ride.
Lilley made the ridiculous real.

Christopher Guest (Spinal Tap, Waiting for Guffman) is the undisputed
king of the mock-dockers, but he takes an economic approach to the
form, sticking to the one-off film format, and perhaps for good
reason. Spinal Tap: The Series doesn’t sound like such a hot prospect
for TV — how many different vegetables could Derek Smalls (Harry
Shearer) wrap in tinfoil and shove down his pants? The conventions of
the sitcom will answer that question for you — again and again.

Trailer Park Boys, Canada’s own beloved mock-doc, is a homegrown
example of how the genre can fall victim to sitcom clichés. (The show
went off the air this past December.) At its best, TPB offered a funny
and authentic glimpse into hoserdom, a dominant aspect of Canadian
culture that rarely receives prominent play. But by season seven, the
show had grown too attached to the catchphrases and props — Bubbles’s
funny glasses, Julian’s rum and coke — that once made it unique. TPB
wasn’t saying anything new but wrung its best jokes dry. Ricky and
Julian went to prison too often, and the ever-endearing Bubbles took
it on the jutting chin just one too many times.

Jim Halpert and Michael Scott, you’re not above the rules that apply
to our best hosers. The clock is ticking for The Office. Might be nice
to say something meaningful before the alarm strikes.

The Office airs Thursdays.

Flannery Dean is a writer based in Toronto.

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