The Student

4.00
    The Student
    2016

    Synopsis

    A high school student becomes convinced that the world is lost to evil and begins to challenge the morals and beliefs of the adults surrounding him.

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    Cast

    • Yuliya AugMother
    • Petr SkvortsovVeniamin
    • Aleksandra RevenkoLida Tkachenko
    • Anton VasilyevPhysical Education Teacher
    • Viktoriya IsakovaKrasnova
    • Svetlana BragarnikSchool Director
    • Irina RudnitskayaHistory Teacher
    • Marina KleshchyovaSchool Bursar
    • Nikolai RoshchinFather Vsevolod
    • Aleksandr GorchilinGrisha

    Recommendations

    • 88

      RogerEbert.com

      One of the strongest aspects of The Student is that, while its view of Venya’s beliefs is decidedly skeptical, it doesn’t ridicule him or suggest that others are immune to his Biblical zealotry.
    • 80

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Offers both a universally relevant examination of religious zealotry and, at the same time, a damning, satirical look at modern Russia, a country whose major institutions have become increasingly dominated and cowed by medieval-minded reactionaries and bigots.
    • 80

      Variety

      The Student is a film that never stops to think; it thinks (and speaks, and shouts) while prodigiously on the move.
    • 80

      Time Out London

      There is surely a sly attack here on the Kremlin and Vladimir Putin’s suppression of liberal values and demonisation of the LGBT community. As the tension escalates, there are some poking between the ribs questions too about free speech and facts in the post-truth era.
    • 80

      Total Film

      Skvortsov gives a scarily grim-faced performance, with biology teacher Elena (Viktoriya Isakova) increasingly beleaguered as the only one resisting him.
    • 80

      The Guardian

      If The Student lacks the searing moral exactness of the Russian literature on which it draws, it’s an often hypnotic warning against dogma’s eternal allure.
    • 75

      Movie Nation

      The Student makes a chilling allegory for the post-fact age (Russia invented it, remember), and a cautionary tale for cultures everywhere. There’s such a thing as being too tolerant of the intolerant.
    • 70

      Screen Daily

      The end result proves commanding and fascinating, even if it’s not wholly satisfying from start to finish.

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    • MARTIN