Young college graduate Jane (shooting star Julia Garner) has a dream: to one day make it to the top as a film producer. So a job as a junior assistant to a powerful entertainment mogul seems like the perfect career springboard. But instead of gaining her first showbiz experience, Jane's days are filled with menial tasks: Making coffee, changing copy paper, answering calls, organizing lunches or trips, greeting new employees.
The longer the young woman follows her daily routine and witnesses the offensive misconduct of her never-visible but omnipresent boss, the more she becomes aware of the power imbalance that encourages abuse. When Jane decides to fight against the abuses, she realizes how deeply they are rooted in the system...
With “The Assistant”, director Kitty Green made the first film on the MeToo debate, whose parallels to the abuse scandal surrounding Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein are unmistakable. Green landed a great casting coup with Julia Garner, who won an Emmy for her role in the series “Ozark”.
Garner's character makes the creeping dehumanization in the workplace palpable and makes 'The Assistant' meaningful far beyond the #MeToo issue - even if, interestingly, the film never depicts or expresses the sexual violence, but only works with allusions.
"THE ASSISTANT is a stealth bomb of a movie: It barely makes a noise but it leaves a crater in your heart." (Boston Globe)
Young college graduate Jane (shooting star Julia Garner) has a dream: to one day make it to the top as a film producer. So a job as a junior assistant to a powerful entertainment mogul seems like the perfect career springboard. But instead of gaining her first showbiz experience, Jane's days are filled with menial tasks: Making coffee, changing copy paper, answering calls, organizing lunches or trips, greeting new employees.
The longer the young woman follows her daily routine and witnesses the offensive misconduct of her never-visible but omnipresent boss, the more she becomes aware of the power imbalance that encourages abuse. When Jane decides to fight against the abuses, she realizes how deeply they are rooted in the system...
With “The Assistant”, director Kitty Green made the first film on the MeToo debate, whose parallels to the abuse scandal surrounding Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein are unmistakable. Green landed a great casting coup with Julia Garner, who won an Emmy for her role in the series “Ozark”.
Garner's character makes the creeping dehumanization in the workplace palpable and makes 'The Assistant' meaningful far beyond the #MeToo issue - even if, interestingly, the film never depicts or expresses the sexual violence, but only works with allusions.
"THE ASSISTANT is a stealth bomb of a movie: It barely makes a noise but it leaves a crater in your heart." (Boston Globe)