The Bottom Line
Harrowing depiction of the American educational system features a superb performance by Adrien Brody.
Director/director of photography:
Tony Kaye
Screenwriter:
Carl Lund
Cast:
Adrien Brody, Marcia Gay Harden, James Caan, Christina Hendricks
NEW YORK ? Movies have been depicting the horrors of the American educational system for more than half a century, from The Blackboard Jungle?to Dangerous Minds and others too numerous to mention. But none has reached quite the nightmarish depths of Detachment, the latest effort from cinematic provocateur Tony Kaye. This film depicting the hellish experiences of a high school substitute teacher makes such previous works by the filmmaker as American History X?seem positively lighthearted by comparison. Commercial prospects look dicey, but there?s sure to be kudos for the film, which recently received its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival.
Adrien Brody, delivering his finest performance since The Pianist, plays the central role of the disaffected Henry Barthes.
Henry?s latest gig is at an inner-city public school that is clearly falling apart. Its principal (Marcia Gay Harden) is about to be forced out due to abysmal test scores, the teachers and other staff members all seem to be floundering, and the vast majority of students display zero interest in learning.
But the kids do respond positively to Henry?s stoic demeanor, his refusal to back down in the face of their taunts and his uncommon degree of empathy. Among those who blossom under his tutelage is Meredith (Betty Kaye, the director?s daughter), an emotionally fragile young woman who displays a genuine talent for photography.
While attempting to handle his demanding work duties, Henry must also contend with a grandfather (Louis Zorich) suffering from dementia and ? representing the film?s most clich?d element ? a teenage prostitute (Sami Gayle) who he takes under his wing.
As usual, the director injects intense visual stylization into the proceedings to frequently arresting effect. The film begins with stark, black- and-white filmed interviews with presumably real teachers describing their experiences and also includes brief animated snippets commenting on the action and a series of sepia-toned flashbacks depicting a traumatic event from Henry?s childhood.
Carl Lund?s?screenplay is most effective in its depictions of the charged interactions between the students and teachers, which could have been written by Paddy Chayefsky in his prime. Among the powerful performers in the terrific ensemble are James Caan?as a wisecracking older teacher who?s seen it all, Christina Hendricks?as a colleague who takes a shine to Henry, Lucy Liu?as a guidance counselor reduced to verbally abusing her charges, and Tim Blake Nelson?as a teacher on the verge of cracking.? ??
The younger performers make equally strong impressions, and Brody delivers an award-caliber turn that is all the more effective for the quiet restraint he exhibits for most of the film?s running time.
It could certainly be argued that Detachment?is ultimately more sensationalistic than it is enlightening. But there?s no denying that it?s the work of a powerhouse filmmaker trying to shake audiences up. Here he succeeds handily.
Venue: Tribeca Film Festival
Production Companies: Paper Street Films, Kingsgate Films, Appian Way
Cast: Adrien Brody, Marcia Gay Harden, James Caan, Christina Hendricks, Lucy Liu, Blythe Danner, Tim Blake Nelson, William Petersen, Bryan Cranston, Sami Gayle, Betty Kaye
Director/director of photography: Tony Kaye
Screenwriter: Carl Lund
Producers: Austin Stark, Benji Kohn, Bingo Gubelmann, Carl Lund,?Chris Papavasilio, Greg Shapiro
Executive producers: Adrien Brody, Peter Sterling, Andre Laport
Editors: Barry Alexander Brown, Geoffrey Richman
Production designer: Jade Healy
Costume designer: Wendy Schecter
Music: The Newton Brothers
No rating, 100 minutes
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/film/~3/hThOCjyvyS8/detachment-tribeca-review-182314
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