"The History Boys" -- a movie review
Posted: Sun Mar 23, 2014 3:38 pm
It'a about a group of boys at a british school who are trying to get into one of the very prestigious Oxford Colleges.
It's an interesting movie and why am I being so easy on it?
IT started out as a stage play and the BBC cut about an hour from it and made it into a movie. It's tough to do a bad job on an Alan Bennet play. In fact, if you are BRitish, damn near impossible to make an adaptation that sucks. . .
Alan Bennet also wrote "The Madness of King George" and "A Private Function" - the later is one of the great comedies of all time.
Richard Griffiths is one of the teachers - an older man who gives rides home to the boys and fondles them. The boys all know it and put up with it. He teaches them more than the usual and he asks that they enjoy life and move into their lives.
Steven Campbell Moore is another teacher, very young, barely out of college himself who acts as a substitute and was hired to help this class make it into college.
It is a good and satisfying comedy and drama. There is a scene at the beginning done entirely in French that is hysterically funny even for those like me who can't say or understand a word of French without sounding awful. . . suffice to say that a pantless boy, prostitution, Ypres, and shell shock all make an appearance in this segment.
By the way - y'all know Richard Griffiths as Bottom in "Midsummers Night's Dream" and Falstaf in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" and Uncle Vernon Dursley in the Harry Potter films. He passed away in 2013.
It's an interesting movie and why am I being so easy on it?
IT started out as a stage play and the BBC cut about an hour from it and made it into a movie. It's tough to do a bad job on an Alan Bennet play. In fact, if you are BRitish, damn near impossible to make an adaptation that sucks. . .
Alan Bennet also wrote "The Madness of King George" and "A Private Function" - the later is one of the great comedies of all time.
Richard Griffiths is one of the teachers - an older man who gives rides home to the boys and fondles them. The boys all know it and put up with it. He teaches them more than the usual and he asks that they enjoy life and move into their lives.
Steven Campbell Moore is another teacher, very young, barely out of college himself who acts as a substitute and was hired to help this class make it into college.
It is a good and satisfying comedy and drama. There is a scene at the beginning done entirely in French that is hysterically funny even for those like me who can't say or understand a word of French without sounding awful. . . suffice to say that a pantless boy, prostitution, Ypres, and shell shock all make an appearance in this segment.
By the way - y'all know Richard Griffiths as Bottom in "Midsummers Night's Dream" and Falstaf in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" and Uncle Vernon Dursley in the Harry Potter films. He passed away in 2013.