List Price: $29.99You Pay Only: $21.99 You Save: $8.00 (27%)Prices subject to change.
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Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
Audience Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0786936282559
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Miramax
Manufacturer: Miramax
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Miramax
Region Code: 1
Release Date: May 03, 2005
Running Time: 96 minutes
Sales Rank: 4413
Studio: Miramax
Theatrical Release Date: 2004
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Editorial Review:
Description: An inspirational story in the rich tradition of MUSIC OF THE HEART and MR. HOLLAND'S OPUS, THE CHORUS has moved critics everywhere to declare it one of the year's very best films! When he takes a job teaching music at a school for troubled boys, Clément Mathieu is unprepared for its harsh discipline and depressing atmosphere. But with passion and unconventional teaching methods, he's able to spark his students' interest in music and bring them a newfound joy! It also puts him at odds with the school's overbearing headmaster, however, locking Mathieu in a battle between politics and the determination to change his pupils' lives!
Amazon.com: By getting nominated for Academy Awards in both the Foreign Language Film and Best Song categories, Les Choristes (The Chorus) made a rare (for a European film) double impression at the 2004 Oscars. This sentimental tale follows the arrival of a new teacher at a remote boys school in 1949 France (the war is a largely unspoken but ghostly presence). With disciplinary problems rampant, and the policies of the old-fashioned headmaster not helping, Monsieur Mathieu decides to introduce choral singing as a way to bridge the gap with his students. You don't need a crystal ball to figure out where this will go, although the movie uses its atmospheric location and lush vocal arrangements well. Bald, dumpy Gerard Jugnot provides a refreshingly offbeat hero (though securely in the traditions of the My Most Memorable Teacher movie); he's sort of a younger Philippe Noiret. Director Christophe Barratier works in the winsome-cute mode that makes a certain kind of French movie into an overly sweet bon bon, although at least this bon bon sings. --Robert Horton
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Good idea; no resolve
I watched this film because of its Oscar nom, despite lulewarm reviews. There is certainly a lot of pathos involved, and I was more reminded of "Dead Poet's Society" than others mentioned in previous reviews. Music is always a terrific reliever of tension. I would like to think that justice was done, if this is, indeed, a true story. There are ugly moments throughout, and a few glorious moments that can make a simple mind like mine think that perfection could really happen, under the circumstances. "Les Choristes" is unrealistic in too many ways, but it's a good story; I wish our troubled children, way too many, could understand the power of music, and realize that the world ain't so bad...Music is INDEED a powerful life entity.
Rating: - A French Teacher's Opinion
Ever since I saw this film a Foreign Language Teaching Conference, I knew I had to have it...it is one of the few Frech films I have seen that is both clean enough to show in a public school (I do skip both of the dirty ditties) and yet interesting to the students. I love it. It just goes to show that not all foreign films (French films in particular) are harsh, ironic, and tragic. Some are charming and filled with glorious music. Can't wait to buy the soundtrack too.
Rating: - Heartwarming
I first saw it at a retreat for teachers, and think it will warm your heart even if you do not teach kids. Beautiful music. Hard to see subtitles if you have a small screen.
Rating: - one of the best feel-good movies of this genre
We've seen them all - films from the teacher-student body drama genre. Dead Poets' Society, Mona Lisa Smile, Children of the Lesser God, Stand and Deliver, Mr. Holland's Opus, and all those sports flicks. The plot is typical - a group of students or a whole school of hooligans, handicapped, or privileged but uninspired adolescents transform into promising individuals who believed in themselves, thus challenging the common view that they are a hopeless bunch through the new revolutionary teacher. The teacher comes from out of town, unfamiliar with the new community, copes with their own personal failures and frustrations through an unintentional life mission, and as a result, does not sit well with the headmaster and parents, what with their with unorthodox teaching methods. Teacher struggles to reach out to students (main character usually a silent one, with untapped potential but happens to have extraordinary, scholarship-worthy talent), succeeds, but in the end cannot beat the system and eventually gets kicked out from the school.
Les Choristes is a French, postwar-set version of this well-known formulaic plot. Think, Dangerous Minds meets School of Rock. Typical of most European films nominated for the Oscars, it is both subtly dramatic and comedic. It has an entire cast of adorable little faces, making it easy for the audience to fall in love with the brats. The spotlight was really on cute Pepinot, the youngest student, who does not seem to have any reason to be in that school except ... Read More
Rating: - The Chorus
"The Chorus" is a wonderful movie to use with teachers or church groups. The subtitles are easy to follow if you don't speak French! It is an inspiring story about "lost" children in an institution, where one master comes with different ideas and with love for the pupils, one who makes a difference in their lives AND the institution.
A great film to generate discussion about the relevance to education today, and the vocation of teaching.
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