Film StillFilm & TVNewsFruits of her labour: 5 cult films about women at workFrom Clockwatchers to Real Women Have Curves, a new film season at London’s Rio Cinema explores the exhaustion, humour and solidarity that shape women’s working livesShareLink copied ✔️November 13, 2025Film & TVNewsTextHalima Jibril Work has always been a contentious topic in our society. In the UK, the job market remains in shambles – unemployment has reached its highest level in four years, and a 2023 study found that British workers are among the most dissatisfied in Europe. In the US, a 2025 study shows that 66 per cent of employees are experiencing some form of burnout. Yet, complaints about work, especially from young people still adjusting to this system, are often met with intense scrutiny. They’re dismissed as lazy, too soft, or unprepared for the “real world.” However, the truth is that most of us feel some level of discomfort with the idea that we are forced to sell a large portion of our time to organisations that hold considerable control over our lives. Film and television have long been fascinated by the world of work, from 9 to 5 (1980) and Working Girl (1988) to The Wolf of Wall Street (2013). More recently, the subject has been brought back into public consciousness through Dan Erickson’s critically acclaimed Apple TV+ series Severance. It’s one of the inspirations behind a new film season at Rio Cinema titled Fruits of Her Labour, curated by Laura Hague, an MA Film Programming student at the National Film and Television School. “I love that show [Severance] so much. It really got me thinking about work,” Hague tells Dazed. The theme of women at work feels especially timely, following a recent New York Times podcast that questioned whether “Liberal Feminism Ruined the Workplace”, featuring two conservative writers. “The films are all about women at work,” Hague explains, “but the feelings of discontent, unhappiness, and dreams of a better life are experiences that resonate with so many of us. What I find fascinating is the sense of solidarity between women in these films. They support one another through the mundaneness of everyday life. You can often feel like you’re in competition with your colleagues, but a lot of these films reject that idea.” From well-known films like Real Women Have Curves (2002) to lesser-known classics like Supermarket Woman (1996), Hague talks us through the movie she’s chosen for the season. Fruits of Her Labour will run from November 13-25 at Rio Cinema, Dalston and Star & Shadow, Newcastle 1/5 You may like next 1/5 1/5 Film Still Letter to Brezhnev (1985), dir. Chris Bernard“Set in the 1980s, Letter to Brezhnev is about these two 20-year-old scouse girls who meet these Russian sailors on a night out, and they have this whirlwind romance. The two girls are working-class Liverpudlians, and they work in a chicken factory. A lot of the film takes place outside of work, but when they are at work, they’re bored and want more from life. Through meeting these men, they see a way out of their circumstances. It’s all about class and hope and trying to overcome all of that.”view more + 2/5 2/5 Film Still Supermarket Woman (1996), dir. Juzo Itami“Released in 1996, Supermarket Woman is one of the lesser-known films on this list, made by the same director of Tampopo. It’s about this independent supermarket in this village, and a massive discount chain store opens next door. Gorô, who owns the supermarket, is panicking and one day bumps into an old school friend called Hanako. He explains the situation, and she begins to offer him some helpful advice on what he’s doing wrong. He then invites her to help him save the supermarket, and through this, ‘supermarket woman’ is born.” “She takes on the task of trying to save this supermarket. The film is so fun, cheerful and slapstick. She ignites a great deal of passion in her coworkers and brings back a lot of joy to their lives. The film is really about their relationships with one another and their togetherness.” view more + 3/5 3/5 Film Still Clockwatchers (1997), dir. Jill Sprecher“Directed by Jill Sprecher, Clockwatchers is about four women who work as temps and are chronically dissatisfied with their jobs. They have mundane office jobs that wear them down and are constantly given busy work by their managers. That might sound a bit drab, but it’s darkly comedic as well. Especially with the casting, you have Lisa Kudrow, Toni Collette, Parker Posey and Alanna Ubach, they are a real comedic bunch.”“It’s a great film about workplace friendships, solidarity between women, and the way it can disappear when someone moves on. I programmed it for the season because it is still relevant to how we feel about work today. So many people don’t get meaning from their jobs, and they’re just sitting idly by waiting for the clock to hit five every day, but they also have these really intense bonds at work as well. Even if your work does give you meaning, you still need a job to survive. It shows the stupidity of it all. Someone on Letterboxd described it as an anti-capitalist, Marxist feminist masterpiece, which is intense but true.”view more + 4/5 4/5 Film Still The Second Mother (2015), dir. Anna Muylaert“Valis is the main character in The Second Mother, and she is a live-in housekeeper for this really wealthy family in São Paulo. She moved away years ago to send money back to her daughter, who was living with relatives at the time. When Jessica turns 18, she decides she wants to go to university in São Paulo, so she stays with Val and the family she lives with. After 15 years of working and living with this family, Jessica’s presence is quite disruptive because she’s this young girl who is very self-assured and exists outside of the world of work and is really attuned to the absurdity of everything.”“The family they live with don’t explicitly assert that Val and Jessica are less than them, but when Jessica comes to live in their big mansion, her mother forces her to sleep in her room rather than stay in one of the many spare rooms. Jessica is baffled by this and the way she and her mother must make themselves smaller. She questions everything. The film excels at exposing class differences while also being incredibly funny.”view more + 5/5 5/5 Film Still Real Women Have Curves (2002), dir. Patricia Cardoso“A significant theme in Real Women Have Curves, like Supermarket Woman, is the importance of worker solidarity. America Ferrera plays high school student Ana Garcia, a first-generation immigrant in LA. She wants to attend college, but her family can’t afford it. Her mum and sister work at a garment factory. Anna wants something from life, but she doesn’t have the money behind her to do it. Her mom is telling her to settle down, get married, and have kids, but she wants to date and love herself.”“The women in the garment factory are also significant to the story – they are vastly underpaid and treated incredibly unfairly. Still, through it all, they support each other as they work long hours in this extremely hot factory. They are in complete community with one another.”view more + 0/5 0/5