Years later, when I, like Dadier, became a high-school English teacher, I identified strongly with him. There's a lot of realism both in the film and in the book about the frustrations of an idealistic first-year teacher who discovers that things aren't exactly like he thought they'd be.
Put this one together with last week's film for a great double-feature presentation of what the '50s were like in the movies. And if the '50s weren't like that in reality, well, the movies mirrored the reality better than you might think. So did the books. Check 'em out.
6 comments:
A really terrific little movie. We don't make movies/tv about teachers anymore unless they sing and dance.
Well...um...it lost me at about the point that the veteran, bitter teacher brings in his irreplaceable collection of shellac jazz 78s to Try To Reach the Savages, and they make him sad. Sure, that'd happen.
This would be (a second-hand, in film adaptation) example of the kind of thing that tends to put me off the Hunter works.
But there's no questioning the cast (Sidney Poitier as hoodlum!) or the energy of the production.
Patti--well, not centered on the teachers and/or their teaching, necessarily (though it's always a factor), but such recent items as EASY A, PRECIOUS, THE BIG C, HUNG and MISS GUIDED come to mind...none of these necessarily first-rate (MISS GUIDED the closest) but all better than GLEE, at least.
It was on yesterday and I saw a little of it. Made me want to find a smarmy-looking kid and punch him out.
I thought you felt that way every day, Cap'n!
I knew I was forgetting something good...the best portrayal of a teacher's plight at the moment might be BREAKING BAD, which AMC has just cancelled. (Bastards!)
Meanwhile, there's this veteran who seems to be following me around...(not that I've been mistakable for a kid for some decades...)
Me? Surely you jest. Never had a calmer, more peaceable chap trod the Earth.
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