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  1. 8 de dez. de 2006 · The Boss of It All: Directed by Lars von Trier. With Jens Albinus, Peter Gantzler, Friðrik Þór Friðriksson, Benedikt Erlingsson. An IT company hires an actor to serve as the company's president in order to help the business get sold to a cranky Icelander.

    • (13K)
    • Comedy
    • Lars von Trier
    • 2006-12-08
  2. The Boss of It All (Danish: Direktøren for det hele) is a 2006 experimental comedy film written and directed by Lars von Trier. The film uses a cinematic technique invented by von Trier himself called Automavision, which automatically determines framing by randomly tilting, panning or zooming the camera without being actively operated by the cinematographer.

  3. 25 de abr. de 2007 · The owner of an IT firm wants to sell up. The trouble is that when he started his firm he invented a nonexistent company president to hide behind when unpopu...

    • 2 min
    • 85,2K
    • IFCFirstTake
  4. The Boss of It All. Director Lars von Trier ditches the pretensions but keeps his misanthropy in The Boss of it All, a surprisingly sharp and witty comedy about office life gone haywire. For years ...

    • (66)
    • Jens Albinus
    • Lars Von Trier
    • Comedy
    • The Boss of It All | Comedy1
    • The Boss of It All | Comedy2
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    • The Boss of It All | Comedy5
  5. To describe “The Boss of It All,” Lars von Trier’s acidic corporate comedy, as “ ‘The Office’ Viewed Through the Looking Glass” only scratches the surface.

  6. 23 de mai. de 2007 · In this comedy, the owner of an IT firm wants to sell up. There is just one problem: back when he started the firm he invented a fictitious boss to hide behind when there were unpopular decisions to make. The would-be buyers insist on negotiating with the boss in the flesh and so the owner resorts to employing a down-at-heel actor to play the part. Suddenly, the actor discovers that he is a ...

  7. The Boss of It All is von Trier at his silliest. Even though it is 100 minutes, the runtime feels like it was padded with a bunch of gags that go on longer than they should. It does have an interesting concept, though.