The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
7th Dec 05
⭐71.35%
: 21
Baby Driver
28th Jun 17
⭐74.45%
: 9
Batman
21st Jun 89
⭐72.34%
: 8
Forrest Gump
23rd Jun 94
⭐84.64%
: 23
Blade Runner 2049
4th Oct 17
⭐75.88%
: 17
Inception
15th Jul 10
⭐83.70%
: 30
Arrival
10th Nov 16
⭐76.20%
: 12
Edge of Tomorrow
27th May 14
⭐76.32%
: 11
I Am Legend
12th Dec 07
⭐72.10%
: 10
The Martian
30th Sep 15
⭐76.89%
: 12
El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie
11th Oct 19
⭐69.66%
: 7
The Shawshank Redemption
23rd Sep 94
⭐87.12%
: 35
Your Name.
26th Aug 16
⭐84.79%
: 15
Tomorrowland
19th May 15
⭐62.86%
: 10
Create with Love ❤️ by Zaw Myint
Noam Chomsky
Self
Yánis Varoufákis
Self
After Work
⭐62.00% /
4th Aug 23 /
Documentary
Kuwait’s constitution says that every person has the right to a job, so in some places 20 people are employed for one person’s job. In South Korea, they work so much that a policy has been introduced to turn off computers at the end of the day so that employees can’t work any more. In the US, they give up over 500 million holiday hours each year, while Amazon’s drivers are trying to form a union. Meanwhile, robots are poised to take over most jobs and put the rest of us out of work. Work is so crucial to our identity and what we spend our waking hours on that it is barely noticed anymore. A lot has happened since a group of Puritan priests invented the concept of work ethic in the 1600s, and in the 21st century the very concept of work is in many ways disintegrating. A perfect situation for a filmmaker like Swedish mastermind Erik Gandini, who travels the world to explore what the concept of work means today – if it means anything at all.