VHS Movie Reviews for To Sir, with Love [VHS]

To Sir, with Love [VHS]

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VHS Movie Reviews of To Sir, with Love [VHS]

Movie Review: Fabulous
Summary: 5 Stars

One of Poitiers' best ever!! With an assortment of great supporting cast, music, story and backdrop, To Sir With Love is a classic. Poitier is an out of work enginner who takes a job as a teacher in one of the worst schools in London. When at first he cannot seem to get through to the students with regular teaching methods, Poitiers character takes on a completly different way that teaches both the students and himself about the possibilities in life. Everyone should watch this movie, it was a favorite when I was young and still one today!!

Movie Review: If Only
Summary: 4 Stars

Watched this with my 22 year old daughter many years after the last time I had seen it on cable. Still wonderful, innocent, if not naive, tear-jerker, with Lulu's one hit wonder, To Sir With Love, and some other one-hit wonders on a decent sound track. By the way, my daughter loved. We both cried at the end! IF ONLY they made movies like this again!

Movie Review: A Stirring Tribute to From Crayons to Perfume
Summary: 5 Stars

In TO SIR, WITH LOVE director James Clavell recreates a world that is timeless in its rich connotations of a collision of values between a working class and partly thuggish group of east London high school seniors and a dedicated teacher who is determined to give them vitally needed survival skills of which they are only dimly aware. Sidney Poitier is Mark Thackeray, an out of work engineer who agrees to teach only due to financial straits. What occurs in his class has been covered before and since in films like BLACKBOARD JUNGLE and DANGEROUS MINDS, but in Clavell's masterful hands, the result is a near perfect blending of many seemingly disparate elements that somehow fuse into a classic.

Poitier faces a group of tough kids who want to like him but have been conditioned to give all teachers a hard time. As if peeling away the many delicate strands of an onion, Poitier similarly reveals the teen angst that is surely a universal condition regardless of economic status. The film has too many moments of understated power that in the hands of a lesser director might have gone for the overkill, but Poitier, ably assisted by Judy Geeson as a beautiful Pamela Dare and Suzy Kendall as an equally lovely teacher co-worker, all manage to bounce off each other at just the right moment. Where the hoodlums in BLACKBOARD JUNGLE were vile, in Thackeray's class were hiding their inner fears under surface petty disruptions. From the opening reel to the last you simply knew that this was a magical film populated by idealistic types like Poitier and Kendall or unruly students whose unruliness was a mask.

Other reviewers have suggested that the look and feel of the film give it a dated aspect. This may be true but being dated need not be a flaw. In the closing scene at the graduation dance, all the pieces meld into a thoroughly enjoyable whole. The Beatle-type look of the band, the sixties-style frugging, the look on Judy Geeson's face as she dances with Poitier, and the stirring lyrics by Lulu all coalesce into a timeless tribute to the cusp between crayon and perfume. In its own way, TO SIR WITH LOVE is one of those magical movies that announce to an often unready and unlistening world that a new generation is about to make its mark.

Movie Review: Better Than I Remembered
Summary: 5 Stars

"To Sir With Love" (1967) could be considered a blue collar and contemporary "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" (1969) or an urban "Mr. Holland's Opus". I was entertained but unimpressed when I saw it in a theatre at the time of its release. At the time the film was simply too obvious in its attempt to cash in on the hot issues that were being embraced at that time. Anything British was super cool, race relations was the "in" topic-especially things dealing with the plight of blacks, Lulu's hit title song was being played incessantly on all the pop stations, Judy Geeson was suddenly every guy's dream girl, and Christan Roberts was obviously intended to draw teen girl's to the theatre.

Surprisingly the film has held up remarkably well and somehow seems far less contrived. In part this is because I have learned that the novel (of the same title) from which it was adapted, was written by a cultured black man (E.R. Braithwaite) who taught similar students in a similar East End London public school. In addition, the story is timeless as educational systems continue to pigeon-hole students at an early age, steering the least promising into dead-end programs where little is done to tap whatever potential they may have for learning.

That's basically the film's story as out-of-work engineer Mark Thackeray (Sidney Poitier) takes what he hopes will be a temporary job at an East End school. His class is the one nobody wants, full of students who have no apparent aptitude or interest in anything academic. They are in their last year (British schools set this type of student loose on the world at age 15 but these students look several years older) and just killing time until they can leave school at the end of the term. These are not the JD's of "Blackboard Jungle" (a 1955 Poitier film) but a real socio-economic segment of British society.

Thackeray quickly sizes up the situation and realizes that he can do nothing to make up for years of low expectations. So he starts teaching them basic manners, survival skills, and how to behave as responsible adults; things that will soon be useful to them. And they quickly recognize this and for the first time actually become attentive to a teacher and his lessons.

More importantly, he gives them a role model, a poor black man who worked hard, paid his dues, and transformed himself into someone they consider cultured and literate. They have been tagged as losers by the educational system but Thackeray opens their eyes to other possibilities.

Of course Lulu sings the excellent title song, which is nicely connected to the actual story, and does a surprisingly good job of acting for the camera. The film's best moment is the field trip to the museum creatively illustrated by a montage of still photos accompanied by a version of the title song. "The Mindbenders", a contemporary pop group ("Groovy Kind of Love") contribute a couple songs and actually appear briefly at a dance gig.

Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.

Those schoolgirl days, of telling tales and biting nails are gone, But in my mind, I know they will still live on and on, But how do you thank someone, who has taken you from crayons to perfume? It isn't easy, but I'll try,

If you wanted the sky I would write across the sky in letters, That would soar a thousand feet high, To Sir, with Love

The time has come, For closing books and long last looks must end, And as I leave, I know that I am leaving my best friend, A friend who taught me right from wrong, And weak from strong, That's a lot to learn, What, what can I give you in return?

If you wanted the moon I would try to make a start, But I, would rather you let me give my heart, To Sir, with Love

Movie Review: Polished Acting from Poitier
Summary: 5 Stars

In 1967 Mark Thackery is in England and unable to find a job as an engineer. To make ends meet he begins teaching in an east end school in London for problem children. He takes over an unruly class of difficult teenagers but instead of giving up works to open them up. Thackery takes them to outings and expands their minds while teaching them life skills to be adults. The class blossoms and Thackery gains their trust. When graduation day comes he ends up not taking an engineering job in the midlands opting to stay and reform more trouble East End London kids.
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