In a desperate attempt to keep her new job at a Welsh warehouse, Megan presses a pregnant colleague to get her "pick rate" up, putting her and her fetus at risk.In a desperate attempt to keep her new job at a Welsh warehouse, Megan presses a pregnant colleague to get her "pick rate" up, putting her and her fetus at risk.In a desperate attempt to keep her new job at a Welsh warehouse, Megan presses a pregnant colleague to get her "pick rate" up, putting her and her fetus at risk.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 wins & 4 nominations total
Elizabeth McCafferty
- Training Video Presenter
- (as Elizabeth McCaferty)
Hanna Jarman
- Pregnant Mum
- (as Hannah Jarman)
Jâms Thomas
- Megan's Dad
- (as Jams Thomas)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Megan Roberts lands a new job at a Welsh Warehouse, where she bumps into Alys Morgan, a friend from her childhood. In a company obsessed with pick rates and speed, Megan
Definitely an eye opener, I think we all know the firm in particular that they're taking aim at, and if you've worked in such a place, you'll understand it. These places on the outside look terrific, smiling management, often amazing staff rooms, gyms, but the demands are diabolical.
Alys's story genuinely made me feel uncomfortable, it was sickening, and what's worse I imagine cases like this aren't just imagined.
Megan's story was equally interesting, her transformation from shy and naive employee to corporate monster was something.
Craig Parkinson was so good here, Dot was a pretty nasty character, but even he has nothing on this guy, what a monster. The cast were great I thought, every character meant something.
Some of the dialogue is shocking, off-boarding, such a polite term for getting the sack.
Forget customer is key, the only key here is cash, that's what drives these businesses, forget staff welfare, it's about the bottom line.
Guy wrenching, addictive viewing.
9/10.
Definitely an eye opener, I think we all know the firm in particular that they're taking aim at, and if you've worked in such a place, you'll understand it. These places on the outside look terrific, smiling management, often amazing staff rooms, gyms, but the demands are diabolical.
Alys's story genuinely made me feel uncomfortable, it was sickening, and what's worse I imagine cases like this aren't just imagined.
Megan's story was equally interesting, her transformation from shy and naive employee to corporate monster was something.
Craig Parkinson was so good here, Dot was a pretty nasty character, but even he has nothing on this guy, what a monster. The cast were great I thought, every character meant something.
Some of the dialogue is shocking, off-boarding, such a polite term for getting the sack.
Forget customer is key, the only key here is cash, that's what drives these businesses, forget staff welfare, it's about the bottom line.
Guy wrenching, addictive viewing.
9/10.
I don't think I will be buying again from certain online shopping companies , after watching this heartbreaking short film.
It's eye opening seeing how some of the workers are treated in a quest to keep the "picking numbers" high. Its shocking that this treatment of workers happens in modern society. Fabulously acted by all concerned. .
It's eye opening seeing how some of the workers are treated in a quest to keep the "picking numbers" high. Its shocking that this treatment of workers happens in modern society. Fabulously acted by all concerned. .
This is an excellent little film. Little, in terms of runtime & budget, enormous in terms of engaging story-telling that realistically reflects reality for a great many people, (even in some of the world's richest countries ~amplified in the rest) and indicates the true nature of the forces behind it.
Tightly written, concisely directed, convincingly acted, drone-shot punctuated efficient cinematography.
So much better than small stories told with big budgets.
Tightly written, concisely directed, convincingly acted, drone-shot punctuated efficient cinematography.
So much better than small stories told with big budgets.
Just saw it on BBC1. It is shocking, but not surprising. Everyone knows what happens when we buy online. It is good to show so we can't say we didn't know about the working conditions in such warehouses. Very strong movie.
Life and Death in the Warehouse is a hard-hitting drama about what life is like for the thousands of workers inside the massive online retail warehouses. Tragically it is all too real with toilet breaks, conversations and 'pick rates' constantly measured and failing leads to ruthless off-boarding (sacking). The management's passive aggression and gaslighting is a like a constant smack in the face. I'm certain this will spark conversations about working conditions. Congratulations to the writer Helen Black and all the cast and crew involved in making this drama. It was brilliant and deserves all the awards.
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- Vida y muerte en un almacén
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