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The History Boys (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:101
Fresh:63
Rotten:38
Average Rating:6.3/10
Consensus: While not quite having the impact of its original stage version, The History Boys nevertheless is a witty and involving school drama.
Theatrical Release:13-10-2006
Synopsis: THE HISTORY BOYS tells the story of an unruly class of bright, funny history students in pursuit of an undergraduate place at Oxford or Cambridge. Bounced between their maverick English master... THE HISTORY BOYS tells the story of an unruly class of bright, funny history students in pursuit of an undergraduate place at Oxford or Cambridge. Bounced between their maverick English master (Richard Griffiths), a young and shrewd teacher hired to up their test scores (Stephen Campbell Moore), a grossly out-numbered history teacher (Frances de la Tour), and a headmaster obsessed with results (Clive Merrison), the boys attempt to sift through it all to pass the daunting university admissions process. Their journey becomes as much about how education works, as it is about where education leads. The big screen adaptation of the five time Tony award-winning play of the same name, THE HISTORY BOYS utilizes the same talent that originally brought the production to the stage. It is directed by Nicholas Hytner from a script adapted for the screen by the playwright Alan Bennett. The stage version premiered to the world in London’s prestigious National Theatre in 2004, winning audience and critical acclaim alike including Laurence Olivier Awards for Best New Play, Best Director (Nicholas Hytner) and Best Actor (Richard Griffiths), as well as Evening Standard and Critics Circle Awards for Best Play. The production will premiere on Broadway in the spring of 2006. The key cast of the film remains the same as the original stage version led by Richard Griffiths, Clive Merrison, Frances de la Tour, Stephen Campbell Moore, Sacha Dhawan, Samuel Anderson, Dominic Cooper, Andrew Knott, Samuel Barnett, Russell Tovey, Jamie Parker and James Corden. THE HISTORY BOYS is produced by Kevin Loader (ENDURING LOVE, CAPTAIN CORELLI’S MANDOLIN), Damian Jones (MILLIONS, WELCOME TO SARAJEVO) and Nicholas Hytner. A distinguished British screenwriter, playwright and actor, Alan Bennett recently won his fourth Olivier Award for Best New Play for “The History Boys.” Previously he won two Oliviers for “Talking Heads” in 1992 and one for “Single Spies” in 1989. In addition to being nominated for an Oscar, a BAFTA Award and a Writers Guild of America Award for the feature film THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE, Bennett won a Writers Guild of Great Britain Award. He has been nominated for eight BAFTA TV Awards and won one for “A Question of Attribution,” and received three BAFTA Film nominations. Bennett began his career as an actor and writer for the "Beyond the Fringe" comedy troupe, which also included Dudley Moore, Peter Cook, and Jonathan Miller. Nicholas Hytner won a BAFTA Award for Best British Film for THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE. He earned both a Tony and an Olivier Award for his direction of “Carousel” and an Olivier Award for “The History Boys.” He was awarded the 1989 London Evening Standard Theatre Award and London Critics Circle Theatre Award for Best Director for “Miss Saigon” and “Ghetto.” Hytner’s feature film directorial credits also include THE OBJECT OF MY AFFECTION and THE CRUCIBLE. Hytner is Artistic Director of London’s National Theatre. -- © Fox Searchlight Pictures [More]
Starring: Frances De La Tour, Stephen Campbell Moore, James Corden, Richard Griffiths
Starring: Frances De La Tour, Stephen Campbell Moore, James Corden, Richard Griffiths, Clive Merrison, Adrian Scarborough, Russell Tovey, Penelope Wilton
Director: Nicholas Hytner
Director: Nicholas Hytner
Screenwriter: Alan Bennett
Producer: Damian Jones, Kevin Loader
Composer: George Fenton
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
Reviews for The History Boys
I was sad when school let out. The characters are so rich I wanted to spend more time with them.
It's too bad that the film loses its way because The History Boys asks some interesting questions about what to learn and how to use it.
In the world of movies, it's a rare treat to find anything as sophisticated and witty as Alan Bennett's screenplay.
The final delight of The History Boys is realizing that these charming young actors... will now graduate to new things.
...despite all the earnestness...the characters and their tribulations never engage our sympathy or interest.
The unique duplication of stage cast to screen cast might be the most exciting thing about this conventional classroom exercise.
The dialogue in Bennett's script is more riveting than the situational developments.
Nicholas Hytner (The Madness of King George and The Crucible) adapts Alan Bennett's hit play with the entire stage cast reprising their roles, and leans heavily on Bennett's sharp-witted dialogue and the school performances.
Taking a production pretty much intact from stage to screen robs it of its surprises. The cast seems to know what's coming, and so do we. There's not a single moment where you sense 'discovery' taking place.
A funny thing happened to The History Boys on the way to the screen. The players are the same, the dialogue is pretty much identical, but the vibrancy of the play -- its exhilarating immediacy -- has been muted.
It forces you to think about complicated issues while still being witty and engaging. You can’t even say that about most teachers, let alone most movies.
The film becomes a sermonette on tolerance. But with its one-sidedness, it fails to practice what it preaches.
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