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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| DEAD POETS SOCIETY (director: Peter Weir; screenwriter: Tom Schulman; cinematographer: John Seale; editors: William Anderson/Lee Smith; music: Maurice Jarre; cast: Robin Williams (John Keating), Robert Sean Leonard (Neil Perry), Ethan Hawke (Todd Anderson), Norman Lloyd (Mr. Nolan), Josh Charles (Knox Overstreet), Gale Hansen (Charles Dalton), Dylan Kussman (Richard Cameron), Allelon Ruggiero (Steven Meeks), Kurtwood Smith (Mr. Perry), Leon Pownall (McCallister), James Waterston (Gerard Pitts), Alexandra Powers (Chris Noel), Kevin Cooney (Joe Danbury); Runtime: 128; MPAA Rating: PG; producers: Steven Haft/Paul Junger Witt/Tony Thomas; Touchstone Pictures; 1989) |
| "Falters
when it goes for too much heart-tugging
manipulation."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Even though more subdued than usual Robin Williams is ill-suited for the role of the rebel poetry teacher, as he can't help looking smug and presenting himself as so full of it. The coming-of-age educational comedy/drama is set in 1959 (with the pic doing little to tune us in to that time period) and is located in the fictitious picture-perfect country location of the elite staid boys' Vermont prep school called Welton Academy (filmed at St. Andrews, a private boarding school in Delaware). Director Peter Weir ("Witness"/"Picnic At Hanging Rock"/"The Last Wave") has it go rah! rah! rah! with some sincere episodes that pit traditional methods of teaching against unconventional methods, and has something good to say about teachers like Williams who inspire their students. But Tom Schulman's script, despite winning an Oscar, falters when it goes for too much heart-tugging manipulation, contrivances that too easily fit into the writer's progressive education agenda and for its predictable overwrought formulaic dramatics to win the day over the valuable life lessons presented. Newly appointed poetry teacher John Keating (Robin Williams), a graduate of the Academy, undermines tradition as he seeks popularity with his senior class boys and fires them up with his freethinking spirited lessons (tearing up a text book's useless introductory explanations on poetry and having his students speak from atop the teacher's desk) that go against the grain of the accepted teaching methods used at the stuffy school that originated in 1859. The energetic Keating passionately reads them Walt Whitman and tells them all to reach within and find the poet inside, rallying his regimented students with the cries of 'Carpe Diem'--a call for them to 'seize the day!, because tomorrow we will all be food for worms.' This rallying cry brings several of his impressionable students out of their shell and, of course, draws the wrath of the establishment educational figures, who follow the parents' wishes above all else in the desire to get the students prepared for successful professional careers and to get them admitted into prestigious colleges. The educators have no interest in seeing the students march to the beat of a different drum, as does Keating. The film's focus is
on the
struggles of the students, who include the bottled-up,
withdrawn,
parental neglected and self-doubting aspiring writer
Todd Anderson
(Ethan
Hawke); the outgoing student leader and would-be actor who is frustrated by his
overbearing father
who wants him to be a doctor with a degree from
Harvard, Neil Perry
(Sean Robert Leonard); the intellectual who learns to
use his heart
under Keating's tutelage, Steven
Meeks (Allelon Ruggiero); the wealthy daring
trickster, who might be
the only one of K's students who could actually be a
poet, Charles
Dalton (Gale
Hansen); and
the hopelessly romantic rich boy
pursuing a local public high school cheerleader dating
the fearsome
football star, Knox Overstreet (Josh Charles). In the school year book,
Keating is
mentioned as belonging to the clandestine Dead Poets
Society, which
comes to the attention of his students. Though faced
with disciplinary
action if caught, the students go full steam ahead and
form the Dead
Poets Society. They are given by K. the book of rules
for that
unofficial school club and hold meetings at the same
secret cave in the
woods in which he used back in his student days. The
group convenes
there after hours by opening their meetings by also
quoting Thoreau's
"Sucking marrow out of life." The boys then read the
poetry of the
greats to each other, or play the saxophone or just goof
around. The
idea being that poetry will allow them to find their own
voice,
motivate them for living life to the fullest and help
them snag females. The self-absorbed,
inexperienced teacher might have the class all
inspired, but he fails
to realize the dangers in having his impressionable
students act out
their impulses without proper guidance. This leads to
a tragedy when
one student takes his advice too far and the stern
headmaster, Mr.
Nolan (Norman Lloyd), unfairly blames Keating for it
and to save the
school's precious reputation fires him. In the end,
most of Keating's
class backs him and feel sorry that they have to go
back to receiving
dull lessons. Though agreeing with
the
pic's belief that the most important aims of education
are to inspire
learning and encourage students to think for
themselves, I found Keating's
ways of striking out new ground mostly superficial,
immature,
problematic, risky and highly manipulative. Though the
villain here is
not Keating (he just seems like the fool who doesn't
realize he's
taking himself too seriously and is unwisely leaving
himself open to
anything bad that might happen to his students). The
true villains are
the caricatured ones, such as the rigid parents who
don't listen to
their children and the inflexible conventional
educators who don't
listen to their hearts. I had mixed feelings
about
such a self-satisfied film that believes, to my
satisfaction,
wholeheartedly that words and ideas can change the
world, but
shamelessly bogs down when its showy offbeat methods
of teaching do not
necessarily seem better than other proven methods. It
often rings a
false note--except for the inspirational part. REVIEWED ON 4/24/2011 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |