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This week, we take a look at the films of Michael Mann. What's your best Mann?

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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



Freedom Writers
Review by Peter T. Chattaway | posted 1/05/2007




Freedom Writers

Our rating:

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MPAA rating: PG-13
(for violent content, some thematic material and language)

Genre: Drama

Theater release:
January 05, 2007
by Paramount Pictures

Directed by: Richard LaGravenese

Runtime: 2 hours 3 minutes

Cast: Hilary Swank (Erin Gruwell), April Lee Hernandez (Eva), Jason Finn (Marcus), Mario (Andre), Imelda Staunton (Margaret Campbell), Patrick Dempsey (Scott Casey), Scott Glenn (Steve Gruwell), John Benjamin Hickey (Brian Gelford)

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Last January, we had Glory Road. And now, with Martin Luther King Jr. Day coming up next week, it must be time for another true story about an educator who bucks the system and inspires his or her students to overcome racial barriers. At first glance, Freedom Writers looks like it might be just another one of those films in which a white idealist liberates her non-white pupils, but thankfully, it turns out to be something rather better than that.

The film, written and directed by Richard LaGravenese (best known perhaps as the writer of The Fisher King and The Bridges of Madison County), is based on The Freedom Writers Diary, a collection of essays about life in the inner city written by the students of Wilson High in Long Beach, California—and while the book may have been conceived and compiled by English teacher Erin Gruwell (played by Hilary Swank), the stories it tells are ultimately those of the students themselves.

Hilary Swank as Erin Gruwell, a young teacher in a difficult classroom
Hilary Swank as Erin Gruwell, a young teacher in a difficult classroom

LaGravenese honors the movie's origins by opening not on Erin, but on one of her students-to-be, a Latina teenager named Eva (April Lee Hernandez) who has witnessed a drive-by shooting and the arrest of her father, and has taken a beating as part of her own initiation into gang life—all before her freshman year in high school.

Although these events are depicted in chronological order, they feel like a flashback, partly because we hear Eva narrate these events in what we gather is a passage from the diary that she will eventually write for Erin's class. And so this sequence unfolds as tragedy, but it also has an element of hope, because we are witnessing these events through the eyes of a young woman who is finding her voice; by reflecting on her circumstances, she will, hopefully, be able to rise above them.

Students are figuratively and literally divided in their distrust
Students are figuratively and literally divided in their distrust

The film then turns to Erin Gruwell herself, who shows up for her first day of school full of enthusiasm and not a little naïve. The students assigned to her class are troublemakers and deadbeats, at least in the eyes of the authorities, and Erin hasn't even finished the first roll call of the year before a fight breaks out. As the school year progresses, Erin's efforts to connect with her students—for example, by using a Tupac Shakur recording to explain "internal rhymes"—simply backfire, when they reject her as a poseur who doesn't understand what their life is really like.

Then, one day, one of Erin's students draws a racist caricature of one of her other students and passes it around the class. Seeing the picture, Erin turns indignant and lectures her class on the perils of prejudice—only to find that almost none of them have ever heard of the Holocaust. This gives her an idea: What if she could get her students to read Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl, and to write their own diaries as well, bearing witness to the horrors around them just as Anne did?

Erin has a word with Andre (played by Mario)
Erin has a word with Andre (played by Mario)

It is tempting to compare scenes like this to that moment in To Sir, With Love where Sidney Poitier dumps a bunch of textbooks on the floor and declares that they are useless to his students, who must learn how to survive in the adult world instead. Erin does embark on a series of lessons and extracurricular activities which have an empowering effect on her students, but she never forgets she is an English teacher; when her students propose writing letters to Miep Gies, the woman who sheltered Anne Frank, Erin reminds them that their letters will be marked for proper grammar and punctuation first, so they should be prepared to write more than one draft.




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