|
|
List Price: $19.98Amazon.com's Price: $17.99 You Save: $1.99 (10%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Now!
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0085391144762
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: November 06, 2007
Running Time: 124 minutes
Sales Rank: 27140
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: July 19, 1967
Editorial Review:
Description: Sylvia Barrett is a rookie teacher with a can-do attitude at New York's inner city Calvin Coolidge High. Crowded classes, broken windows, lack of chalk and books are a few of the problems facing Sylvia, yet she carries on - even as a promising student drops out, another sleeps through class, a girl with a crush on a male teacher gets suicidal, and a bright but troublesome student misunderstands Sylvia's reaching out.
Amazon.com: Up the Down Staircase wasn't the first inspirational-teacher movie, but along with To Sir, with Love (also released in 1967), it seemed to set a pattern that gets brushed off every few years: Dangerous Minds, Freedom Writers, etc. etc. And this one still holds up, thanks to the sensitive direction of Robert Mulligan and the central performance by Sandy Dennis. The latter plays an idealistic teacher starting the new term at an inner-city high school (stop me if you've heard this one before), and discovering that the teaching life has as much to do with corralling and motivating kids as it does with rote recitation of facts. All right, it's a familiar tale, but the impeccably authentic approach by Mulligan (To Kill a Mockingbird) and longtime producer (future director) Alan Pakula captures a bracing, semi-documentary feel at times. And then there's Sandy Dennis, fresh from winning a Supporting Actress Oscar for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? the year before. Dennis was a famously polarizing presence in movies of this era; her reliably neurotic Method acting drove some viewers up the wall. Here the style works, as her overmatched but stubborn teacher weathers the usual, so to speak, ups and downs of a school year; Dennis's very fragility shines as a counterpoint to her determined character. --Robert Horton
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - super movie
This movie is a must see for teachers. It really helps one to see the humor and the obstacles teachers face. Sandy Dennis is wonderful as the naive new teacher and all that she goes through during her first year. I recommend highly.
Rating: - Familiar But Surprisingly Resonant Look at a Young Teacher's Trial by Fire in an Urban High School
Fresh from her acclaimed portrayal of the young professor's frail alcoholic wife in Mike Nichols' classic adaptation of Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Sandy Dennis stars in this forgotten 1967 drama that covers familiar territory in the movies, the idealistic high school teacher who must get through to a classroom full of unruly inner-city teens. Variations of the same storyline can be seen in a variety of films like Stand and Deliver, Dangerous Minds, the recent Freedom Writers, ... Read More
Rating: - School Daze
Reading Jim Kohl's outstanding book Noble Poverty: A Teacher's Life in Silicon Valley, I was reminded of one of my favorite movies, UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE. To begin with, the movie is heady nostalgia for me. It was filmed at an inner city high school, on location, two years after I graduated from my own inner city high school. The kids look and dress the same, the classrooms and physical plant look the same, and much of what occurs is reminiscent of my own high school days.
On top of ... Read More
Rating: - 'THERE IS NO FRIGATE . . .' HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
One of my favorite movies. As an innercity public high school student, I remember the snooty kids visiting us from an all-white suburban camelot academy mentioning that it reminded them of "Up the Down Staircase". The late Sandy Dennis' performance as idealistic English teacher Miss Barrett was one of the most undervalued and underrated, and I thought it criminal that she didn't rate at least an Oscar nomination. A wonderful supporting cast, including a pre-Edith Bunker Jean Stapleton and Eileen ... Read More
Rating: - Timeless and perfect...
...so why, oh WHY, hasn't this wonderful film been released on DVD??
Sandy Dennis, the queen of quirkiness, was unforgettable in this, her very best role (we miss you Sandy)!!
And while we're at it, how about releasing some of her other "lost" films on DVD, such as Robert Altman's "That Cold Day In The Park"-- and let's not forget one of the all-time guilty pleasures (based on the D.H. Lawrence novella), "The Fox."
I'm BEGGING here...get these movies released p l e a s e.....
|
|