Working Girl

Working Girl(1988)

R
12/20/1988 (US)Comedy, Romance, Drama1h 54m
6.6

"For anyone who's ever won. For anyone who's ever lost. And for everyone who's still in there trying."

Overview

When a secretary's idea is stolen by her boss, she seizes an opportunity to steal it back by pretending she has her boss' job.

Kevin Wade

Screenplay

Mike Nichols

Director

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Throwback Trailer

Throwback Trailer

Trailer

Jon Hamm announces WORKING GIRL for AFI Movie Club

Jon Hamm announces WORKING GIRL for AFI Movie Club

Featurette

Sigourney Weaver on making Working Girl

Sigourney Weaver on making Working Girl

Featurette

Brian Trenchard-Smith on Working Girl

Brian Trenchard-Smith on Working Girl

Featurette

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C
A review by CinemaSerf
7.0

Written on June 9, 2022

Right from the opening bars of Carly Simon's catchy theme tune and the young girls with huge hair on the ferry - I thought this was going to be entertaining. By and large, it is. "Tess" (Melanie Griffith) is fed up working for bosses who just want to sleep with her, so thinks perhaps things will change the she starts working for "Katherine" (Sigourney Weaver). Always open to ideas, this woman gets hold of one of her assistant's ideas and when she injures herself skiing, "Tess" discovers her boss's duplicity and decides to run with her idea herself - involving "Jack" (Harrison Ford) along the way. Turns out this idea has legs - and multi-million dollar ones at that - but as the two begin to mix business and pleasure - we discover that "Jack" has his secrets to keep too! The pace is generally quite good, the characters have plenty to like about them and the film builds nicely to an enjoyable and fitting conclusion. Griffith is on good form here, she has a spirit and charisma that can't help but raise a bit of a smile. Sarandon and Ford both support well, too with the latter content to take more of a charming but back seat role. Alec Baldwin features sparingly as her creep of a boyfriend, and I could have sworn I saw "Cyn" (Joan Cusack) in Culture Club or Dead or Alive! It's maybe a little bit long, but as feel-good films go, this has a decent script, plenty of chemistry and a vindication that worked for me.