The History Boys
It's England in 1983. A group of young guys who attend grammar school are studying, studying, and studying with their teachers to pass exams to get into the finest universities, Oxford and Cambridge. Oh yes, and there's also field trips, good talks, motorcycle rides with Vernon Dursley that include free ball groping, French plays with prostitutes played by an overweight boy, and musical numbers performed by a lovelorn gay teenager that will bring tears to your eyes.
Writer Alan Bennett adapts his Tony award winning play, The History Boys, into a movie directed by Nicholas Hytner and the result is an interesting, different, metamorphic kind of movie. I never saw the actual play, but the original cast played their roles for the film. It's an upbeat jolly fest with moving musings on education, history, life and knowledge. Then, there's the music. Throughout the picture, pop songs from the 80's, such as The Clash's "Rock The Cashbah", play, though without lyrics. The lovelorn gay teenager sings "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" in class, aiming his words at Dakin (Dominic Cooper), his romantic interest.
Frances de la Tour gives a delicious performance as history teacher Mrs. Lintott. Richard Griffiths plays Hector, the general studies teacher that "the history boys" adore, and which he adores quite a lot too. There's quite a lot of homosexuality throughout the film. Hector's married and closeted; Posner (Samuel Barnett) is the gay teen; Irwin (Stephen Campbell Moore), the new teacher, who has quite a large role, has an attraction to Dakin; Dakin, himself, stuns a character later on in the movie with an offer that doesn't involve womankind. It all certainly is a reason why I enjoyed the film, and thus it might not be for everyone.
At the end of the movie, someone dies. I won't reveal who. As they say in the movie, history is just one f---ing thing after another. We also find out what happens in the future to the history boys, what became of them, if they went to Oxford and Cambridge or not. It's a happy, fun picture but it's also chilly regarding some things. Still, the lesson is, history is just one f---ing thing after another. Pass it on.
I give it an A.
Or:
It's England in 1983. A group of young guys who attend grammar school are studying, studying, and studying with their teachers to pass exams to get into the finest universities, Oxford and Cambridge. Oh yes, and there's also field trips, good talks, motorcycle rides with Vernon Dursley that include free ball groping, French plays with prostitutes played by an overweight boy, and musical numbers performed by a lovelorn gay teenager that will bring tears to your eyes.
Writer Alan Bennett adapts his Tony award winning play, The History Boys, into a movie directed by Nicholas Hytner and the result is an interesting, different, metamorphic kind of movie. I never saw the actual play, but the original cast played their roles for the film. It's an upbeat jolly fest with moving musings on education, history, life and knowledge. Then, there's the music. Throughout the picture, pop songs from the 80's, such as The Clash's "Rock The Cashbah", play, though without lyrics. The lovelorn gay teenager sings "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" in class, aiming his words at Dakin (Dominic Cooper), his romantic interest.
Frances de la Tour gives a delicious performance as history teacher Mrs. Lintott. Richard Griffiths plays Hector, the general studies teacher that "the history boys" adore, and which he adores quite a lot too. There's quite a lot of homosexuality throughout the film. Hector's married and closeted; Posner (Samuel Barnett) is the gay teen; Irwin (Stephen Campbell Moore), the new teacher, who has quite a large role, has an attraction to Dakin; Dakin, himself, stuns a character later on in the movie with an offer that doesn't involve womankind. It all certainly is a reason why I enjoyed the film, and thus it might not be for everyone.
At the end of the movie, someone dies. I won't reveal who. As they say in the movie, history is just one f---ing thing after another. We also find out what happens in the future to the history boys, what became of them, if they went to Oxford and Cambridge or not. It's a happy, fun picture but it's also chilly regarding some things. Still, the lesson is, history is just one f---ing thing after another. Pass it on.
I give it an A.
Or:
Last edited by Sexy Celebrity; 03-28-17 at 07:18 PM.