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Leave it to edgy indie auteurs Richard Linklater (director of Waking Life)
and Mike White (screenwriter/star of The Good Girl and Chuck & Buck) to take
a genre that's been completely rubbed into the ground and left for dead by
hack after hack and make it into something fresh and exciting, not to
mention really good. That's just what they do with School of Rock, a picture
that looks like another empty Jack Black vehicle but turns out to be an
insanely entertaining blend of the musically gifted kids from Camp, the
slightly maniacal yet eager-to-teach educator from Dead Poets Society, and
the private school uniforms (not to mention the hip street cred) from
Rushmore.
Black (Orange County) stars as Dewey Finn, one of those perpetually broke,
30-something burnouts who is still trying to make it as a big-time rock star
when he should be worrying about getting a real job to pay his bills. Dewey
lives with his best friend and former bandmate-turned-substitute teacher Ned
Schneebly (White), as well as Ned's bitchy, upwardly mobile girlfriend Patty
(Sarah Silverman, Evolution), who despises the very sight of our hero even
when he's on time with the rent.
When Dewey is booted from his own band for being too flashy with the guitar
solos, he realizes the big $20,000 top prize at the upcoming Battle of the
Bands competition has become a pipe dream. It's a situation that makes it
even easier for Dewey to pretend to be Ned when the phone rings in search of
a substitute teacher for the fifth-grade class at Horace Green Prep, the
best private school in the state.
Dewey figures he can clip on his finest bow-tie, show up and sleep off his
hangover while collecting a fat paycheck. But that's not in the cards, as
Dewey is cursed with a class full of Lisa Simpsons - grade-grubbers in
constant need of evaluation and reassurance that they'll each get into the
Ivy League university of their choice. They demand to be educated, and
Dewey eventually complies after spying their musical abilities in band
class. The rest of the film finds Dewey schooling the kids in the ways of
Led Zeppelin and AC/DC, while forming a pint-sized rock combo disguised as a
"top secret" class project with that big Battle of the Bands payday as its
lofty goal.
Clichés abound, as they often do in movies about either a jaded teacher or a
classroom full of apathetic kids, but Linklater, White and especially Black
find a way to keep things perky while never once allowing their story to
drag. A subplot involving Dewey's hysterical yet somewhat heartbreaking
manipulation of Horace Green's principal (played by a very funny Joan
Cusack, Black's High Fidelity co-star) would derail similar films, but in
Rock, it works remarkably well.
Mostly, though, Rock is about Black and the kids. This is a picture that
would not have worked with any other actor in Black's role. He's
deliciously manic in an extremely physical performance that literally made
me tired just to watch. Do yourself a favor and pay attention to some of
Linklater's long takes of Black doing his crazy Jack Black thing and imagine
how grueling it must have been to do more than once or twice. The kids make
their own music in Rock, though judging from the picture's press conference
at the Toronto International Film Festival, I don't think many of them were
doing much acting (keyboard player Robert Tsai isn't doing a funny Asian
accent - it's for real). Rock is bolstered by great opening credits, a fun
soundtrack and musical contributions from Shudder to Think's Craig Wedren
(he wrote the score) and The Mooney Suzuki (they wrote the band's anthem).
1:48 - PG-13 for some rude humor and drug references
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X-RAMR-ID: 35838
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1198068
X-RT-TitleID: 10002413
X-RT-SourceID: 595
X-RT-AuthorID: 1146
X-RT-RatingText: 8/10
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