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Amazing R-Rated Sci-Fi Comedy Is The Office Meets Close Encounters

By Robert Scucci
| Published

Corporate, white-collar jobs are the worst. One time, I worked with a guy who “didn’t like to sit with his back to the door” in the conference room during our weekly management meetings, as if he was Jason freakin Bourne. He was an accounts receivable manager, an avid watch and stamp collector, and weighed north of 300 pounds. Not a single person thought, “man, what a badass” when he said these things, but we just had to grin and bear it. We just smiled and nodded as if he didn’t just say the dumbest thing on the planet. 

The same kind of behavior shows up in 2010’s Drones, except nobody’s pretending to be a highly trained assassin posing as a white-collar client services supervisor who drives a Honda Pilot. No, they’re claiming to be aliens.

A Not-So-Hostile Takeover

Drones 2010

Drones centers on a business-casual G man named Brian (Jonathan M. Woodward), who works as a pencil pusher for the Omni Link company. It’s never really established what he or his coworkers do for a living. Think of it like Office Space. The greatest source of stress around the office is the company changing its filing system from chronological to alphabetical, which completely incenses Cooperman (Dave Allen), the most cynical employee in the building.

But if I’m weighing in here and being entirely honest, if you don’t sort by “date modified,” you’re a total psychopath. That way, the things you were working on most recently, and actually need, are at the top of the list. I’m totally Team Cooperman here.

Drones 2010

There are two other sources of stress in Drones that slowly reveal themselves. First, Brian’s coworker Clark (Samm Levine) accidentally lets it slip that he’s an alien with plans for Earth that haven’t been fully explained. Second, before confessing any of that, Clark encourages Brian to ask out Amy (Angela Bettis), because it’s obvious to everybody that they’ve got some chemistry.

Then, Brian gets to know Amy and learns that she’s also an alien, reporting back to her home planet through the fax machine in the print room. Here’s the real problem. Amy and Clark aren’t from the same planet, and they both plan to take over Earth against each other’s knowledge. What follows is a series of closed-door conversations, eavesdropping, and awkward office romances tangled up in something much bigger than getting accused of stealing the last doughnut from the break room.

Quirky And Fun, But You Have To Use Your Imagination

Drones 2010

Like most low-budget outings, Drones has its fun by never showing you its “monsters.” There are no special effects, and the entire movie takes place inside an office building. Everything is fluorescently lit to the point where your brain practically invents that awful humming noise just to complete the experience. Most of the tension comes from miscommunication and people getting their wires crossed over their motives.

What really sells the premise, though, is Amy’s dynamic with Brian. It’s the perfect interoffice romance because it’s built on paranoia. The kind of paranoia you get when you catch feelings for a coworker and convince yourself that even the smallest amount of happiness will somehow get reported to HR and shut down immediately.

Drones 2010

Angela Bettis knocks it out of the park as Amy because she carries a subtle uncanny valley vibe. It’s not that she looks strange. She’s conventionally attractive and not doing anything overtly off-putting aside from occasionally talking to a fax machine. It’s all in her expressions. She studies everyone around her like she’s trying to figure out how humans operate in real time so she can report back to her own species.

Samm Levine’s Clark is similarly, and inexplicably, strange. Having worked in an office myself for years, nothing he’s doing is technically out of the ordinary, but something about his mannerisms still feels off. Both characters ride that line perfectly, where they seem normal on the surface but just weird enough to make you question everything.

Drones 2010

Stuck between two potential alien invasions, all centered around his workplace, Brian is either weirdly okay with everything or completely bewildered depending on the moment, which makes for a surprisingly fun watch.

Drones is the kind of movie you throw on after a long day at an office job as a reminder to seek employment elsewhere. Everything from the interpersonal politics to the drab setting feels intentionally uncomfortable.

It makes you wonder if humans were ever meant to sit in cubicles all day (Peter Gibbons was right). An office suite is the perfect place for alien overlords to gather and talk shop if you think about it. It’s the one place where humans show up completely disengaged, which probably gives the aliens the upper hand before lunchtime most days.

Drones 2010

As of this writing, Drones is streaming for free on Tubi.


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Entertainment

Amazon has a bunch of multi-port Anker fast chargers on sale — get up to $30 off this weekend

Best Anker chargers you can shop right now:


Anker Nano


Anker Desktop Charger (112W)


Anker USB Charger (67W)

If you’re still hoarding a drawer full of charging bricks, it’s probably time to let them go (I’m a Millennial too, so I get it). There’s really no reason to have so many blocks when you can buy one or two do-it-all chargers and just be done with it. Then you can use that drawer for other junk, like old receipts you’ve kept for no reason and Starbucks straws, because, you know, just in case.

Right now, Amazon’s got a ton of Anker fast chargers on sale. Here are the best deals to grab before the weekend’s over.

Best budget deal

$19.49
at Amazon

$29.99
Save $10.50

 

Why we like it

This tiny Anker Nano plug has two USB-C ports and folds down flat, so it won’t cover the entire outlet or crowd your bag when you travel. It delivers 47W of power, so even though it’s tiny, it can still charge your phone and your tablet at the same time.

Right now, you can get it for $19.49, down from $29.99, at Amazon. That’s a 35% discount or about $10.50 in savings.

Best desktop charger deal

$33.99
at Amazon

$39.99
Save $6

 

Why we like it

If your desk is covered in wires, this heavy-duty block offers a quick fix. It splits a 112W of power across six separate outlets (three USB-C and three USB-A) so you can power your entire workspace from one wall plug. It even comes with a little silicone cable organizer so everything stays in one spot instead of sliding off the back of your desk.

Right now, you can get it for $33.99, down from $39.99, at Amazon. That’s a 15% discount or $6 in savings.

Best wall charger deal

$34.99
at Amazon

$49.99
Save $15

 

Why we like it

This is the one to throw in your laptop bag if you hate carrying around three separate bricks for your computer, phone, and headphones. It gives you two USB-C ports and one classic USB-A port, and it’s basically half the size of a standard MacBook charger block.

Right now, you can get it for $34.99, down from $49.99, at Amazon. That’s a 30% discount or $15 in savings.

More Anker charger deals

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We tried 6 killer Acer laptops from Computex: Hyperlights, 18-inch beasts, and everything between!

Acer brought everything from thin ultrabooks to giant gaming rigs.

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Chicken Shop Date with Paul McCartney makes beautiful music

Chicken Shop Date has seen host Amelia Dimoldenberg flirting with some serious names over the last 10 years, from Billie Eilish to Keke Palmer, SZA to Cher. Her latest illustrious guest? Sir Paul McCartney.

Having recently closed out The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, the music legend and Beatle is hitting the press circuit to promote his new album, The Boys of Dungeon Lane. On Friday, he headed for the titular chicken shop, where Dimoldenberg asked him the tough questions.

Notably, McCartney’s in the same seat where Dimoldenberg previously interviewed Paul Mescal, who’s playing the Beatle in Sam Mendes’ upcoming biopic.

McCartney’s no stranger to buzzy British web series and podcasts, appearing on Jessie Ware’s Table Manners, Marina Hyde and Richard Osman’s The Rest Is Entertainment, and Tom Holland’s The Rest Is History.

Want more of the latest entertainment news, reviews, trailers, and interviews? Sign up for Mashable’s Top Stories newsletter.

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