Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

THE FUNNIEST MOVIE YOU’LL EVER SEE ABOUT LABOR ORGANIZING

- BY GARY THOMPSON THE PHILADELPH­IA I NQUIRER

The pun embedded in the title of rapper- activist Boots Riley’s wacky new movie “Sorry to Bother You” is both a clue and a caution — you’re going to get a comedy about telemarket­ing, but also a movie with more on its agenda (labor organizing, for instance) than escapist summertime laughs.

Riley’s main character, who goes by the Dickensian name Cassius Green (“Get Out” star Lakeith Stanfield) is one of those Americans left behind by “full employment.” He’s out of work, behind on his rent, about to be evicted, along with artist girlfriend Tessa Thompson. But he’s always hustling for a job, lands a commission-only sales position ( the interview scene is a keeper) at a telemarket­ing firm, and immediatel­y puts on his headset and gets to work.

It’s here that Riley gives the movie the first of its many inventive jolts. Phone conversati­ons in movies are usually deadly, but not here — as Cassius makes his pitch, the floor collapses, and he drops into the living rooms of his customers, watching their reaction to his pitch.

That customer reaction, by the way, is not good. He gets a lot of hang-ups. A veteran coworker ( Danny Glover) gives him advice: Use your “white voice,” and in another of Riley’s experiment­al flourishes, he supplants the voices of Stanfield and Glover with the piped- in voices of comedians Patton Oswalt and David Cross.

Of all the nutty ideas ( and there are millions) in Riley’s movie, this was my least favor- ite. For one thing, you can hear Oswalt and Cross trying to add extra scoops of nerdy vanilla to their vocals, which actually complicate­s and weakens the joke. For another, we’re deprived of the fun of Glover and Stanfield acting this — playing around with intonation­s and inflection­s, arriving at something nonthreate­ning and bland enough (à la Dave Chap- pelle) to sell encycloped­ias and to Middle America.

In any event, once he’s mastered the voice, Cassius starts moving merchandis­e, and gets the call to go “upstairs,” where a golden elevator takes super-callers to an elite sales team, where Cassius is celebrated, validated and compensate­d. His co-workers (Steven Yuen) downstairs are not so lucky. They’ve decided to organize and unionize, and Cassius finds himself caught between solidarity and prosperity.

The movie is wildly uneven but lively and timely — in its own surreal way, it stands as one of t he few Hollywood movies to show an awareness of chronic l ow- wage pressures in our full- employment economy. It takes aim at the gig- economy disrupters ( the f ilm’s resident oligarch and villain, played archly by Armie Hammer, is named Lift), but it’s by no means a lecture or a polemic. The movie has smarter- than- usual critiques of corporate imperative­s ( the more Wall Street learns about Lift’s depraved and exploitati­ve labor schemes, the more the stock goes up), and just enough crazy jokes to sustain it.

 ?? PETER PRATO/ANNAPURNA PICTURES ?? Lakeith Stanfield, left, is Cassius Green and Danny Glover plays Langston in “Sorry to Bother You.”
PETER PRATO/ANNAPURNA PICTURES Lakeith Stanfield, left, is Cassius Green and Danny Glover plays Langston in “Sorry to Bother You.”

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