Documentary
Article reserved for subscribers
The documentary by François Ruffin and Gilles Perret returns to a series of scenes where Sarah Saldmann, a bourgeois and reactionary editor, comes up against the reality of work and precariousness without consequences.
In 2016, François Ruffin and Gilles Perret formed for the first time the shock duo who with the satirical docu-investigation Thanks Boss! sank their fangs with infectious appetite into the calves of billionaire Bernard Arnault (who has recovered if we judge by the growth of his business since then). The film was expected to exceed 500,000 admissions in France and win the César for best documentary. Two other films from the tandem have since been released (I want the sun Then Get up, women!) but without repeating the same backfiring score at the box office. The distributor Jour2Fête seems to be expecting a lot from the new opus this week Get to work! with a combination of 140 screens, with the seemingly improbable meeting between the ex-LFI deputy-youtuber, now green affiliate, and the lawyer Sarah Saldmann, main character and consenting guinea pig of an experiment of
France