THE SCHOOL OF ROCK
Rating: 4/5 stars
Date of Review: February 8th, 2004
REVIEW BY JOHN ULMER (Copyright, 2004)
It was just a matter of time until a film like this came along. A slacker
decides to transform a bunch of repressed children into well-educated young
adults. Wait a minute, what am I saying? Films like this have come along
many times before--"The Dead Poets Society," "Mr. Holland's Opus,"
"Hardball," and "The Emperor's Club," and that's only naming a few titles of
many.
But here's a movie so different from the rest it deserves some type of
attention. Gone are the clean morals of, say, "Mr. Holland's Opus"--here
come lines like, "Stick it to the man!" with a trailer that advertises,
"...a man who taught them to break the rules." These rules, by the way, are
applied and kept in order by a private elementary school, where Dewey Finn
(Jack Black) is posing as a teacher in order to get some cash to put
together his own rock band.
"'The Man' is everywhere," he preaches to a small group of children. "You've
gotta stick it to him." So they stick it to "The Man" by forming a rock band
during school hours and entering into the Battle of the Bands--in hope that
they'll win the jackpot reward for first place.
I need to start at the beginning.
Dewey Finn is a slacker loser who plays guitar like a pro--the only problem
is that he gets stoned when he and his band are performing and embarrasses
his fellow players. After they kick him out prior to preparing for the
upcoming Battle of the Bands, Dewey decides to form together his own band by
getting some money. But how?
Dewey's roommate Ned Schneebly (Mike White, who also wrote the film and a
song in it) is a substitute teacher ("Not a temp!"), and so when the phone
rings and the call is for Ned, Dewey decides to pose as his best friend in
hopes of getting some quick cash. He soon finds himself at "the best school
in the state," teaching a class of strange kids and trying to avoid getting
found out by the principal (Joan Cusack). A school dropout himself, Dewey
only knows one thing: Music. So he teaches music to the kids after finding
out they can play various instruments--piano, guitar, drums, and even the
cello (which he decides to leave out of the forming band).
Dewey decides to enter his "School of Rock" into the Battle of the Bands,
much to the laughter of other competing bands. But he has true faith in his
pack of school kids. That's part of what makes the film so inspirational and
different from the other junk adorning the market right now--this seems
real, and so does the affection, and Jack Black turns Dewey Finn into a
likable character--the opposite of what someone like Adam Sandler might have
done with the kids. (I can see him in the role, but the film would
undoubtedly have been a bit less of a serious comedy--it would've turned
into a loud, noisy, sporadically amusing comedy.)
The movie uses a lot of old cliches, but they all come off as--at the very
least--acceptable, given the material. This is a refreshingly refreshing
comedy, the type of film that makes you feel good after leaving the
theater--which is a very rare thing these days. The final Battle of the
Bands is both realistic and uplifting. Even the end credits are fun to sit
through.
The film completely relies upon Jack Black as its carrier, and lucky enough
for the film he is a very good lead. This is the film lover's version of a
Rob Schneider or Chris Farley. Black has been around for a long time, always
playing good co-star roles, and in "High Fidelity" he proved that he was
more in-tune with the present times than any other recent "SNL" comedian.
Not that Adam Sandler is bad given the right material, but how many times do
we have to put up with re-makes of "Happy Gilmore"?
Black is arguably one of the funniest fat comedians since John Candy, when
given the appropriate material. He's the type of comedian who could become
quite annoying very quickly, but with the right material and director
focusing behind the camera he turns out to be funnier than most guys out
there. Black's ability to pick increasingly good scripts is something John
Candy never seemed to be able to master; although I think it was basically
because Hollywood didn't want Candy to get good scripts.
Once and a long time there comes the surprise hit wonder. Nobody ever
thought that "School of Rock," a movie starring Jack Black as a slob rock
guitarist, would ever amount to anything. But it turned out to be one of the
most critically-praised films of the year, and after seeing it for myself, I
have to agree that this is a well-made film that has certainly been done
before, but rarely this good, and even rarer is the formula ever this
likable.
- John Ulmer
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