The Guardian (USA)

The Substitute review – vehement inspiringt­eacher thriller is all a bit Mr Chips

- Peter Bradshaw

For all that it’s tremendous­ly shot and vehemently acted, this movie from Argentinia­n director Diego Lerman – about a substitute teacher – is weirdly unsatisfyi­ng in terms of the story it has to tell: contrived, cliched, with secondary characters sketched in and a perfunctor­y and somewhat truncated car-chase climax.

Lucio (Juan Minujín) is a divorced poet and critic in Buenos Aires who winds up having to take a substitute teaching job in a tough innercity school teaching literature to glowering kids (one of whom, inevitably, is a supernatur­ally talented rapper). Lucio’s dad, nicknamed “The Chilean” and played by the veteran Chilean actor Alfredo Castro, is a local community worker and cafe owner with connection­s to the mayor. Lucio’s dad is also a fierce enemy of a local drug-dealing mobster called El Perro, who reportedly has political ambitions of his own, and the Chilean employs Dylan (Lucas

Arrua), a likable, smart kid from Lucio’s class, in his kitchen.

But Dylan stupidly gets involved in dealing drugs from El Perro’s supply on school property; the cops march into the classroom to make arrests. El

Perro is furious at this breach in the unwritten rule that school is out-ofbounds for drug dealing, furious at the damage to his own ambitions, furious that the mayor (and his buddy the Chilean) are gleefully seizing on this opportunit­y to embarrass him. So he and his gang now want to abduct and even kill the hapless Dylan, and Lucio nobly makes it his business to protect this clueless, terrified kid.

And so the inner-city-inspiratio­nalteacher narrative basically carries on in time-honoured ways: the performanc­es, particular­ly from Minujín, are perfectly fine, but the set-up between the gangster and the Chilean and the (off-camera) mayor feels very underwritt­en and under-explained. As the caring teacher, Lucio is basically too good to be true, and he is even awarded the traditiona­l Mr Chips classroom finale. He’s rather less interestin­g than, say, the creepy voyeuristi­c teacher in Lerman’s earlier film from 2010, The Invisible Eye. A rather tiring school day.

• The Substitute is released on 20 January in cinemas.

 ?? ?? A tiring school day … Juan Minujín, centre, in The Substitute.
A tiring school day … Juan Minujín, centre, in The Substitute.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States