Cashback (2004) - full transcript

Ben Willis is an art student who works the night shift several times a week at the Whitechapel Sainsbury's. He's clear about the arrangement: he trades his time for money - cashback, as he calls it. We meet his co-workers, Sharon, Barry, and Matt, and their supervisor, Jenkins. Ben's colleagues are good at wasting time, but Ben talks to us about how he makes his shift go faster: by imagining that time has stopped. We see this late-night world of drudgery through Ben's eyes, as time does indeed stop, and he can get out his sketch book.

When you fall asleep,

you are unware of sleeping
until you awake.

During those missing hours
a whole other world comes alive.

Welcome to the night shift.

My name is Ben Willis.

And three nights a week,
I work the late shift at Sainsburys.

For me,
the supermarket is a trading facility.

Apart from the obvious trade in food
and household products,

the supermarlet trades in time.

During the hours
most normal people are sleeping,

I'm trading my time.



I trade this time for money.

I give them eight hours,

and they give me money.

Cashback.

- Hi Ben.
- Oh, hi.

I'm late again.

Jenkins is gonna kill me.

See you later.

Yeah, see you.

- Sharon!
- Yes, Mr. Jenkins.

- Late again, Sharon.
- I'm sorry, Mr. Jenkins.

Second time this week.

I know, Mr. Jenkins.
I'm sorry, it won't happen again.

Allright. OK...



This eight hour trade gives me the money
I need to pay my way through art college,

when most of my first year
was devoted to the fundamentals of still life.

Well, don't just stare at it Ben.

Clean it up!

I've always wanted to be a painter.

And like many artists before me
the female form has always been

a great source of fascination.

I've always been in awe
of the power they unknowingly possess.

Now are you going
to clean them up or not?

This is Sharon Pintey.

Sharon knows that there's an art
to dealing with an eight-hour shift.

An art to putting your mind somewhere else
so that it becomes unaware of the trade off.

All the people that work here
perfect their own individual art.

Sharon knows rule number one.

The clock is the enemy.
The basic rule is this:

The more you look at the clock,
the slower the times goes.

It will uncover the hiding place of your
mind and torture it with every second.

This is the basic art
in dealing with the trade of your time.

Any cashback?

This is Barry Brickman.

You see Barry thinks of himself
as a bit of a daredevil stuntman.

For a start, Barry is quite well known.

When one of Barry's bike tricks
went wrong,

the cameraman put it on the internet.

Barry has stuck to his scooter
ever since.

Matt Stephens is also
a keen scooterer.

What was the other thing?

What was the other thing?

Sausage.

Oh yeah.

- Now Barry and Matt are good friends.
- There you go.

Between them, they have come up with a very different
way of dealing with the trade of their time.

- Barry.
- What?

Look.

There's an art of finding anything to do
that isn't work.

That was their final warning for pursuing
something to do other than their job.

A few weeks earlier, Barry and Matt
had been reported for what they called

"helping the ladies".

It was these shampoo bottles
that sent them on their quest.

Barry and Matt knew
what they look like...

and they knew that the women in the
supermarket knew what they looked like.

Their theory was that even though it was a
sex toy masquerading as a bottle of shampoo,

women would like to try it as a sex toy
but were embarrassed to buy it,

because they knew what it looked like.

The decision to buy it would be an easier one
if they were already at the checkout.

If they didn't object then Barry and Matt knew
they helped the bottle to find an happy home.

But what they didn't know, was that the bottle
was the best selling shampoo on the market.

Barry had challenged Matt to a scooter race in which
they would sprint down one aisle and up the next.

They would do all 14 alleys
and then back to the starting line.

They had been waiting for the day
the manager called in sick.

The art of doing something else other than
the work you're supposed to do is addictive.

The excitement of doing something
that you shouldn't be doing

along with the consequences
if you're caught doing it

are so strong that it often pulls
others away from their own art.

On your marks...

get set...

go!

When you've perfected the art
of placing your mind somewhere esle,

eight hours will go as fast as this.

Time manipulation
is not a precise science.

Like any art,
it's personal to the individual.

Send them out into the world,
fulfilled and joyful?

But you are the one.

I gotta tell you Sharon, I'm a modest guy.
I felt fantastic.

I look beautiful.

Throw this in your face?

You inspire me.
Perhaps more than I inspire myself...

Yeah, you're lucky.

On a bench, with the boys,

I felt like a god.
I'm an Adonis.

I keep myself in good shape,
I know that.

I see the looks...

I ignore that.

You have to carry on, you know?
You have to strive.

Make your own mark.

I feel like that.
I feel like a real man.

I think you like real men, don't you?

There's something supreme...

So what is the art
in making my shift go so fast?

I imagine the opposite.

The time is frozen.

I imagine that the remote control for life
has been paused.

Within this frozen world
I'm able to work freely and unnoticed.

Nobody would even know
that the time had stopped.

And when it start to back up again the invisible join
would be seamless except for a slight shudder.

Not unlike the feeling
of somebody walking over your grave.

That moment...

when you see somebody walking down the street
who's so beautiful that you just can't help but stare.

Well imagine as I do,
that with a world on pause

it becomes very easy
to understand the concept of beauty,

to have it frozen in front of you,

that precise moment captured.

Unawares.

For me this fascination with beauty
started at a very young age.

I was 6 or 7 and my mum and dad
had taken on a foreign student.

She was in her late teens and
was studying English at a near by school.

Being Swedish, the walk from the shower
to her room didn't need to be a modest one.

It was at that moment that something
very profound happened to me.

I was exposed to the female form
in a way I had never experienced.

I felt fascination and wonder
at the beauty of her nakedness,

and I wanted to freeze the world
so I could live in that moment for a week.

I've never had a feeling
of such completeness.

To this day, I still think it was one
of the most beautiful things I'd ever seen.

You dropped these.

And would it be wrong?

Would they hate me ?

For seeing them.

I mean really seeing them.

I read once about a woman whose secret fantasy
was to have an affair with an artist.

She tought that he would really see her.

He would see every curve,

every line,

every indentation and love them because
they were part of beauty that made her unique.

And when I'm ready, the only thing
I need to do to start time again...

is crack my fingers.

Barry !