Teachers

    Teachers
    1984

    Synopsis

    A teacher tries to overcome his frustration teaching a high-school that seems to be full of flunkies.

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    Cast

    • Nick NolteAlex Jurel
    • JoBeth WilliamsLisa Hammond
    • Judd HirschRoger Rubell
    • Ralph MacchioEddie Pilikian
    • Allen GarfieldCarl Rosenberg
    • Lee GrantDr. Donna Burke
    • Richard MulliganHerbert Gower
    • Royal DanoDitto Stiles
    • William SchallertHorn
    • Art MetranoTroy

    Recommendations

    • 50

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Teachers has an interesting central idea, about shell-shocked teachers trying to remember their early idealism, but the movie junks it up with so many sitcom compromises that we can never quite believe the serious scenes.
    • 50

      TV Guide Magazine

      An admirable attempt at a fresh version of an old genre, Teachers falls short, but not by much.
    • 50

      Miami Herald

      Teachers is more or less entertaining, but TV tactics are too diffuse on the big screen. America is still waiting for someone to produce a school satire with some teeth in it. [05 Oct 1984, p.C9]
    • 50

      Newsweek

      Just about every scene written for JoBeth Williams, as an idealistic lawyer pushing the lawsuit and falling in love again with her old teach Nick Nolte, strikes a stridently false note, and in the final 20 minutes the movie totally self-destructs. Too bad. The cast is good and so are Teacher's intentions. A strong principal should have whipped this show into shape. [08 Oct 1984, p.87]
    • 42

      Christian Science Monitor

      Socially committed realism and screwball comedy don't mix easily. That's the main reason that Teachers is a mess. [02 Nov 1984, p.25]
    • 40

      Chicago Reader

      Someone had another Hospital in mind, and they even hired Arthur Hiller to direct it, but the attempt to merge black humor and strident social commentary seems even more uncertain this time.
    • 40

      The New York Times

      Teachers is Arthur Hiller's attempt to do for public education what he did for medicine in The Hospital, and the results are very uneven.
    • 30

      Time Out

      Hiller's sledgehammer direction turns the problems common in education into an endless parade of clichés, feebly propped up by wacky humour, inarticulacy, ham and corn. Avoid.