School of Rock

School of Rock

School of Rock official movie poster
Directed by Richard Linklater
Produced by Scott Aversano
Steve Nicolaides
Scott Rudin
Written by Mike White
Starring Jack Black
Joan Cusack
Mike White
Miranda Cosgrove
Sarah Silverman
Music by Craig Wedren
Cinematography Rogier Stoffers
Editing by Sandra Adair
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) October 3, 2003
Running time 108 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $35,000,000 (estimated)[1]
Gross revenue $81,261,177 (domestically)
$131,282,949 (worldwide)

School of Rock, also called The School of Rock, is a 2003 American musical comedy film directed by Richard Linklater, written by Mike White, and starring Jack Black. The main plot centers around hard rock singer and guitarist, Dewey Finn (portrayed by Black), who is unanimously kicked out of his band and subsequently disguises himself as a substitute teacher at a prestigious prep school and forms a band of fifth-grade students to win the upcoming Battle of the Bands so he can pay his rent for his apartment.

Contents

Plot summary

Dewey Finn, a hard rock singer and guitarist, is unanimously kicked out of his band No Vacancy by his bandmates for his arrogance and frequent hyperactive stage antics. His submissive roommate and lifelong friend Ned Schneebly (writer Mike White), a substitute teacher, is pressured by his girlfriend Patty Di Marco (Sarah Silverman) to evict Dewey unless he "gets a real job" and pay off his growing rent debt, which he only promises to do out of sympathy to Ned because of his fear of never getting another girlfriend. Dewey feels forced to give up his passion until he receives a phone call intended for Ned from Rosalie Mullins (Joan Cusack), principal of Horace Green, a prestigious prep school in Woodbury, New York, asking Ned to fill in for a teacher who would be out for several weeks due to a broken leg. Desperate for income to avoid getting evicted, Dewey pretends to be Ned and takes the job as a substitute teacher for the fifth-grade class.

Dewey has no real idea how to carry out his role as a teacher, and instead simply gives his students constant free time. However, when he overhears his pupils playing in music class he realizes that the children of his class are musically talented. He decides to turn his temporary job into what he tells them is a special class project, but is actually a personal one: to turn a classroom full of kids into a rock band and crew, which will serve as a vehicle to stardom, ultimately to win the upcoming Battle of the Bands, where he is out to avenge his eviction from his old band and win the $20,000 prize. After realizing that the kids are mostly interested in pop and rap music, Dewey turns the school days into lessons of rock history and music playing, exposing his students to those artists he regards as rock legends. Many rock legends are featured in classic photos and footage during a montage scene, including The Ramones, Jimi Hendrix, Iggy Pop, Pete Townshend, Angus Young, The Clash and Buddy Rich.

Dewey narrowly escapes detection when Ms. Mullins decides to attend one of his class's lessons to check on their progress, forcing him to actually teach the official course material. Dewey attempts to revive any old love for rock he finds in her, having found out that she likes Stevie Nicks and playing her song "Edge of Seventeen" on a jukebox. The two develop a close friendship after this. Meanwhile, the class audition for the Battle of the Bands, which Dewey told them was their "school project". They are turned back because they show up too late. With Summer's help, Dewey persuades the Battle's managers by lying that the students are all terminally ill with "stick-it-to-da-man-ni-osis", a fictional rare blood disease, and out of compassion, they allow the students to perform in the Battle of the Bands.

However, later that day, Dewey (who had requested on multiple occasions that he be paid in cash) is exposed when Ned receives a paycheck from Horace Green in the mail, knowing he has never worked there. During the parent-teacher night later on, Dewey meets the students' parents, who initially seem very suspicious of his ability to teach their children. Dewey succeeds in convincing them that he is a competent teacher, but Ned appears and confronts Dewey (due almost entirely to his girlfriend's persuasion). His real identity is revealed, and he is fired from the school. Considering himself a failure, he falls into depression, only recovering when the students, on their way to the Battle of the Bands via school bus, plead with him to join them. Realising what has happened, Ned finally stands up to his girlfriend and leaves her to watch the concert.

At the competition, the band plays "School of Rock", a song written by their lead guitarist Zack Mooneyham, instead of Dewey's "In the End of Time". Despite the strong reception from the audience (including Ms Mullins and the students' parents, who thought Dewey abducted the kids), the class loses to Dewey's ex-band No Vacancy, but accept their defeat. The crowd becomes angered by No Vacancy's victory and call for School of Rock to come back on stage. The band goes for an encore, playing "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)" by AC/DC with an altered ending. In the ending sequence, Summer is seen arguing a deal over her cell phone as she enters the "School of Rock", a newly opened after-school program where Dewey continues to coach the band and Ned teaches the younger ones, and the credits roll as the band sings "The movie is over, but we're still on screen," breaking the fourth wall.

Characters

Inspiration

A stage dive gone wrong incident involving Ian Astbury of rock band The Cult was witnessed by Jack Black, and was used as inspiration for a scene in School of Rock, in which the character Dewey Finn, stage dives and hits the floor; "I went to see a reunion, in Los Angeles, of The Cult; they were playing and Ian Astbury, the lead singer, took a dive. It was at The Viper Room, and it was just a bunch of jaded Los Angelinos out there, and they didn't catch him and he plummeted straight to the ground. Later I thought it was so hilarious. So that was put into the script".[2]

Production

Many scenes from the movie were shot around the New York City area. The school portrayed in School of Rock is actually Main Hall at Wagner College in Staten Island, New York.[3]

Music

Soundtrack

A soundtrack album of the same name was released on September 30, 2003. The film's director Richard Linklater scouted the country for talented 13-year-old musicians to play the rock-and-roll music that features on the soundtrack and in the film.

One noteworthy feature of the soundtrack is the inclusion of Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song". Led Zeppelin has a history of not allowing their songs to be used for commercial purposes, and rarely give permission for anyone to use their songs, the only exception being filmmaker Cameron Crowe, who was the only person to write about them favorably while he was a writer for Rolling Stone magazine. To get permission, Richard Linklater came up with the idea to shoot a video on the stage used at the end of the film with Jack Black begging the band for permission and the crowd cheering and chanting behind him. The video was sent directly to Led Zeppelin, and permission was granted for the song. The video can be seen on the DVD extras.

Music featured within the film

  • "For Those About To Rock" by AC/DC (Dewey uses the lyrics in a speech to the class)
  • "Fight" by No Vacancy *
  • "Stay Free" by The Clash
  • "Touch Me" by The Doors *
  • "Do You Remember Rock 'n' Roll Radio?" (Ramones cover) by Kiss
  • "Sunshine of Your Love" by Cream *
  • "Back in Black" by AC/DC
  • "Iron Man" by Black Sabbath (riff Dewey plays to Zack)
  • "Highway to Hell" by AC/DC (riff Dewey plays to Zack)
  • "Smoke on the Water" by Deep Purple (riff Dewey plays to Zack)
  • "Substitute" by The Who *
  • "Greatest Love Of All" by Whitney Houston (Dewey mentions the lyrics as his reason for no testing)
  • "Roadrunner" by The Modern Lovers
  • "My Brain Is Hanging Upside Down (Bonzo Goes to Bitburg)" by Ramones *
  • "The Wait" (Killing Joke cover) by Metallica
  • "Sad Wings" by Brand New Sin
  • "Mouthful of Love" by Young Heart Attack
  • "Black Shuck" by The Darkness
  • "Immigrant Song" by Led Zeppelin *
  • "Set You Free" by The Black Keys *
  • "Edge of Seventeen" by Stevie Nicks *
  • "Ballrooms of Mars" by T. Rex *
  • "Moonage Daydream" by David Bowie
  • "TV Eye" by The Stooges *
  • "Ride Into the Sun" by The Velvet Underground
  • "Heal Me, I'm Heartsick" by No Vacancy *
  • "School of Rock" by School of Rock *
  • "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)" (AC/DC cover) by School of Rock *
  • "Math is a Wonderful thing" by Jack Black and Mike White
  • "Teacher's Pet" by School of Rock

* Featured on the Soundtrack album

Reception

School of Rock was met with high critical acclaim and Black's performance was praised by most of the critics. It received a "Certified Fresh" rating of 91% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 186 reviews with an average rating of 7.7/10, and it fared even better with their selected top critics; out of 36 reviews, all but one were positive, which left the film with a rating of 97% with an average rating of 8.2/10. On Metacritic, the film has a rating of 82 out of 100 which indicates "universal acclaim".

Box office performance

The movie was a financial success. It grossed $131,282,949 internationally. The budget of the film was $35 million.

Awards and nominations

The film was nominated for several awards, including Black receiving Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor - Comedy or Musical (which he lost to Bill Murray for Lost in Translation), and winning an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance.

Sequel

On May 23, 2008, Jack Black revealed a sequel was in the works: "I'd really like to do it, the last one was great. We are seriously thinking about it; there's already a script. In a few weeks we have to decide if we go through with the project or not."[4]

Variety reported on July 13, 2008 that Richard Linklater is attached to direct again, and Scott Rudin is returning as producer.[5] Mike White, who penned the first, is writing the screenplay, titled "School of Rock 2: America Rocks," which picks up with Finn leading a group of summer school students on a cross-country field trip that delves into the history of rock 'n' roll and explores the roots of blues, rap, country and other genres.[6]

School of Rock 2: America Rocks was confirmed by Paramount on July 14, 2008.[7] However, on September 5, 2008, director Richard Linklater said the film "might not" happen at all and that Paramount just jumped the gun on the news.[8]

On June 16, 2009, while promoting his new film Year One, Black commented on the development of the film, saying, "Yeah, there's development. We'll see. I don't know. I'm a little hesitant about doing a sequel. I had fun doing the first one, just don't want to do something because it's there. I want to do it because it's going to be really funny or better than the first one."[9]

Legacy

A number of the children from the film continued to produce music, and have performed together as the School of Rock Kids,[10] appearing on a Woodstock 40th anniversary tour[11] and in the second season finale of the VH1 reality television series Celebrity Rehab Presents Sober House, during which they played with Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley and Guns N' Roses drummer Steven Adler.[12]

References

External links