"The Office" Appraisals (TV Episode 2002) Poster

(TV Series)

(2002)

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8/10
Appraisals (#2.2)
ComedyFan201025 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
David makes appraisals. He is also very jealous because some of the workers consider Neil to be funnier than him. A new worker is interested in Tim and invites him to a bar.

David is being his funny self. I especially liked how he treated this girl in a wheel chair. Not that it was good but funny. Both how he let her on the stairs during the drill because she was too heavy to carry down. And how he pushed her from the table at the bar and then pushed her back in.

His little appraisals with the staff were also hilarious. I loved how he made Dawn call him her role model by eliminating everyone whom she would choose instead.
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10/10
The Canterbury Tales...
MaxBorg8911 January 2009
Life at the office can be hard: demanding bosses, uncooperative colleagues, yada yada yada. It gets even worse at The Office, with none other than David Brent calling the shots.

His latest "achievement"? It's time for appraisals, and he's desperately hoping someone mentions him as a role model. Naturally, that doesn't happen, but other things emerge, more specifically hidden dreams: Tim would like to study Psychology at the local University, while Dawn originally became a receptionist just so she could have a day job while striving for a career as an illustrator. With that out of the way, David focuses on his attempts to make friends with the new people (of course, telling the one of African descent your favorite actor is Sidney Poitier isn't a very subtle move) but fails admirably and gets in bigger trouble when he carelessly insults Neil in front of everyone.

With hindsight, the seeds of what will become the season's major turning point (more on that when the right time comes) are planted as early as in this episode. How it all evolves remains to be seen, but the sheer attention to detail is staggering (then again, since Gervais wrote and directed every episode alongside Stephen Merchant, it's likely they planed those smaller things in advance). The second-to-last scene is one of the bleakest in the show's run, but it's also preceded by one of the funniest: Brent giving Tim his appraisal. According to on-set reports, the four-minute conversation required 74 takes, all because of Gervais inability to stick to the script from time to time (as pointed out in a behind-the-scenes featurette regarding another scene). It was worth the hard work: the result is even better than the Muppets joke from the previous episode (which gets a follow-up here, by the way).
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