The Teacher

The Teacher

By

  • Genre: Crime, Thriller
  • Release Date: 1974-05-29
  • Runtime: 98 minutes
  • : 4.2
  • Production Company: Crown International Pictures
  • Production Country: United States of America
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4.2/10
4.2
From 29 Ratings

Description

18-year-old Sean's first summer after completing high school is much spent with 28-year-old teacher Diane, who's husband is too often motorcycle-racing instead of with her. Wacko Ralph also has "the hots" for Diane; and it doesn't help that Sean was with Ralph's younger brother, Lou, when Lou died

Trailer

Reviews

  • Brent Marchant

    6
    By Brent Marchant
    The myriad challenges of daily living in the Occupied Palestinian Territories of Gaza and the West Bank have increasingly become the subject of documentary and narrative features in recent years, chronicling the many hardships local residents face in just getting by. These films have collectively addressed an array of subjects, such as the encroachment of Israeli settlements, capricious residential demolition orders, constant and harsh government scrutiny and deferred justice for Palestinians. And all of these issues are now explored in this debut offering from writer-director Farah Nabulsi. Loosely inspired by true events, the film follows the complicated life of West Bank high school English teacher Basem El-Saleh (Saleh Bakri), a man beset by a troubled past (presented in flashbacks) and a genuine desire to help his students live better lives (most notably brothers Adam (Muhammad Abed Elrahman) and Yacoub (Mahmoud Bakri)) while clandestinely maintaining his commitment to his people’s political resistance movement. At the same time, by contrast, Basem also wrestles with his budding romantic feelings for Lisa (Imogen Poots), a compassionate English transplant who works as a youth counselor at his school. On the surface, this combination of narrative elements would seem to provide the makings of an engaging story, but the presentation of Basem’s often-conflicted life often feels somewhat clumsy, disjointed and meandering, as if the picture doesn’t always know what direction it wants to take. In the process, it frequently feels like it’s systematically ticking off items to be addressed from a checklist of issues commonly faced by the Palestinian population under Israeli occupation. What’s more, the film’s romantic storyline is somewhat overplayed, often drawing audience attention away from its more relevant story elements. In short, the execution here leaves something to be desired. This is not to suggest that the issues probed here are unimportant; they most certainly are significant. However, their handling here regularly feels awkward, leaving viewers wondering how (or if) everything will eventually tie together in the end. Consequently, “The Teacher” plays like a release that could have benefitted from some scrutinous script revisions and more judicious film editing to make for a more tightly focused finished product. The plight of the Palestinians is nothing to be minimized or marginalized, but, if movies are to help raise awareness of their circumstances, the vehicles used for doing so should do better justice to their situation than what’s apparent in this release.

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