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Chris Knipp
07-11-2009, 12:43 AM
Bohdan Slama: THE COUNTRY TEACHER (2008)

Review by Chris Knipp

Calves and lanky boys and making do in the country

This somewhat ironically titled Czech film, dubbed Best Queer Film at the 2008 Reykjavík Film Festival, depicts the experiences of a confused gay schoolteacher who moves from Prague to the country and falls in love with a straight teenager. He's not a country teacher. He is someone who has left the faculty of an elite school in the capital because it's too much dominated by his talented mother (Zuzana Bydzovska) and because he's broken up with his boyfriend, whom he never really loved. Presumably he's also on the run from his gayness, since he hides it now. The principal of the country school (Cyril Drozda) knows he's messed up somehow to end up here, and predicts he'll last no more than six months.

That's before the pensive Petr (Pavel Liska), who looks perpetually befuddled or depressed, runs into Marie (Zuzana Bydzovská), a weather-beaten widow with red hair and good bone structure, and her son Lada (Ladislav Sedivy), a beautiful, lanky youth who looks like a male model but thinks himself a loser. Together Marie and Lada run a dairy farm. Petr's new milieu is rugged, and the women are blunt and the men are blunter. There's much drunkenness on view, with smoking of joints, quaffing of beers and downing of shots, but no sign of fun, except when Lada's making out in the hay with his girlfriends, who don't stick with him long.

Despite emotional paralysis, Petr's physically quite presentable, and Marie signals interest at once, but he brushes her off. The reaction is similar but much stronger when, after much delay and against his better judgment, he makes a pass at Lada. His former boyfriend (Marek Daniel) shows up in a fast red car, a yuppie headhunter who now lives in Germany. He again is rejected, and surprisingly runs off with Lada's girl.

Things go back and forth after that. Somehow when the film had barely begun I was reminded of Penelope Gilliatt's bittersweet screenplay for John Schlesinger's Sunday Bloody Sunday (http://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=423). The plots are utterly different, but there is the same focus on sexual ambivalence and compromise. The way The Country Teacher is resolved is all about making do.

Petr teachers his class about nature, and there are some none-too-subtle messages in what he has to say to his students at the film's beginning and end about, of all things, snails. Two calves' birthings also, one stillborn, one successful, have a similarly pointed message to convey. Why are Marie, Petr, and Lada all still together at the end after all that has happened? Surely not just to help a cow give birth. No, it's just that "everybody needs somebody," as Marie intones.

A sequence when Petr briefly returns to his parents and comes out to his high-powered mother, by way of explaining why he isn't sorry a former girlfriend has married, seems from another more sophisticated movie, especially in the subtle way Petr and his bee-keeper father (Miroslav Krobot) interact.

Petr and Lada have both run off, and both come back. Petr surprises the country school principal by deciding to stay on after all, and when they express delight he pointedly tells them, "What if you were to know that I am homosexual?" "Ah, well, that's an accepted thing now," the principal says, after a pause, and the woman teacher who's been hitting on Petr gulps and agrees. Perhaps Petr is growing out of being a self-hating homosexual. Still, Sláma has not indicated that he has prospects for a gay life in this rural setting (he may, but there's no hint of it).

Despite its frustrating half-a-loaf ending, The Country Teacher inspires sympathy for its main characters and makes them come to (limited) life. Too bad that Petr is such a doofus and that the film has only one strong, risky moment. Minor characters seem somewhat one-dimensional. This lacks the chaotic richness of Slama's 2005 Something Like Happiness (http://www.filmwurld.com/articles/features/nyff05/somethinglike.htm) (NYFF 2005), but in return it's a lot more clearly focused. At times the use of modern classical music is obtrusive, especially when Petr is tutoring the teenage Lada, who after all likes only loud rock and video games. Perhaps the art music is meant to tell us Petr is out of tune with the boy, but he's out of tune with us at that point too. We've had enough.

In limited US theatrical release from March 2009, The Country Teacher/Venkovsy ucitel will be issued on US DVD September 9, 2009.

Howard Schumann
02-10-2010, 11:57 PM
Before I post my review, I have to take issue with some of your characterizations which to me are off the mark. Petr is hardly a "doofus" but a thoughtful. sensitive individual who has the courage to reject the advances of a clearly unstable friend, disclose his homosexuality to his parents and to his principal, and to gradually earn a degree of self-acceptance and become more comfortable in his own skin. This is also true of the boy and his mother who do not "learn to make do" but are willing to express their connection, their forgiveness, and their need for each other. Nowhere in your review are any of these themes mentioned.

Howard Schumann
02-11-2010, 12:00 AM
THE COUNTRY TEACHER (Venkovsky Ucitel)

Directed by Bhodan Slama, Czech Republic (2008), 117 minutes

Czech director Bhodan Slama’s acclaimed The Country Teacher looks at love and loss at a rural dairy farm in the Czech Republic. It is a gentle, humorous, and often inspiring film about the struggle for self-acceptance and the resilience of people who must go through many spaces to discover that their lives work better together than apart. The film has gorgeous photography of the rural Czech countryside and includes the birth of a calf, perhaps an allegory for the need for three individuals to pull together. It is a narrative-centered film of considerable depth, one in which there is strong character growth and development, the kind of film Hollywood used to make.

When Petr (Pavel Liska), a gay teacher from Prague, arrives to teach science to youngsters in a small farming town, suspicions are raised by the principal (Cyril Drozda) about what he is running away from. The teacher, however, says everything is ok but his reticence and constant hangdog expression suggests otherwise. Petr manages to form a bond with a single mother, a fiercely independent cow-herder named Maria played by the exceptional Czech actress Zuzana Bydzovska. Distressed over the breakup of an abusive marriage, she looks to Petr to fulfill her needs but discovers in a hayloft that his needs may be quite different than hers.

Another example of unfulfilled longing is the relationship between Maria’s lanky 17-year-old son Lada (Ladislav Sedivy) and Beruska (Teresa Boriskova), a girl visiting from the city who plans on studying law. Both seem to be involved with each other until Lada begins to question whether or not he is not smart enough for his more sophisticated girlfriend. Beru shrugs it off until she perhaps comes to the same conclusion and runs off with Petr’s visiting ex-boy friend (Marek Daniel), a scatter-brained headhunter from Germany whose major talent seems to be one of disruption.

In one of the film’s most revealing scenes, Petr visits his slightly overbearing mother (Zuzana Kronerova), also a teacher, in Prague and comes out to her after being questioned extensively about an ex-girlfriend. Though there is sadness, there is no bitterness or recrimination and his mother’s only concern is that he is not alone. Petr is thoughtful and introspective and when he tells his raucous ex-boy friend that he will not engage in sex without love, we believe and trust him. Lada also trusts him as he begins to tutor him not only in Math but in life. Unfortunately, though the heart is strong, the flesh is weak and, after he rescues a drunken Lada from drowning, Petr gives in to his impulses and engages in some harmless but inappropriate touching when Lada is asleep.

Though there are the expected expressions of shock and name-calling, it is plain that the emotional bond that the three have formed outweighs their shock, even though it takes time for them to realize that. Backed by the gorgeous, meditative music of Vladimir Godar's Mater, The Country Teacher ultimately is not about coming out, however, but about coming to terms with one’s own humanity. Pavel Liska is strong as the self-doubting, insecure teacher whose emotions range from love and longing to guilt and redemption and each person, in their own way, emerges from their own dark corner to reach a place of peace and self-acceptance.

In spite of some unwanted melodrama, The Country Teacher avoids stereotypes and achieves a searing emotional power by telling us that love is stronger than fear and that there can be no love without forgiveness, a sentiment that some film critics have labeled “implausible”. I am reminded, however, of the country priest in Bernanos’ novel Diary of a Country Priest, who said, “How easy it is to hate oneself. True grace is in forgetting. Yet, if pride could die in us, the supreme grace would be to love oneself in all simplicity as one would love any one of those who themselves have suffered and loved." The Country Teacher touches those moments of true grace.

GRADE: A-

Chris Knipp
02-11-2010, 12:05 AM
I have to take issue with some of your characterizations... Petr is hardly a "doofus" but a thoughtful. sensitive individual who has the courage to reject the advances of a clearly unstable friend, disclose his homosexuality to his parents and to principal, and to gradually earn a degree of self-acceptance and becoming more comfortable in his own skin. This is also true of the boy and his mother who do not "learn to make do" but are willing to express their connection, their forgiveness, and their need for each other. Nowhere in your review are any of these themes mentioned. I have given my interpretation, and this is yours. They differ, that's all. I have not failed to mention "themes," just described and seen the action through somewhat less rose-colored glasses. I concluded, "The Country Teacher inspires sympathy for its main characters and makes them come to (limited) life." That is my evaluation. When you say the film "achieves a searing emotional power by telling us that love is stronger than fear and that there can be no love without forgiveness, a sentiment that some film critics have labeled “implausible," this is what the film, the director, the writer tell you They may tell others other things, according to their reaction and interpretation.

Howard Schumann
02-11-2010, 12:24 AM
I have given my interpretation, and this is yours. They differ, that's all. I have not failed to mention "themes," just described and seen the action through somewhat less rose-colored glasses. I concluded, "The Country Teacher inspires sympathy for its main characters and makes them come to (limited) life." That is my evaluation. When you say the film "achieves a searing emotional power by telling us that love is stronger than fear and that there can be no love without forgiveness, a sentiment that some film critics have labeled “implausible," this is what the film, the director, the writer tell you They may tell others other things, according to their reaction and interpretation.

I do not see the world with "rose-colored glasses". That is not only untrue but also insulting. I was not trying to be snarky. I simply loved the film and did not think your review did it justice. I did not sign up here to join a mutual admiration society but to be free to express my candid reactions to what is said and is not said. Please don't take my comments so personally or we won't get very far here.

Chris Knipp
02-11-2010, 01:43 AM
Reviews are by nature expressions of personal opinion.

Chris Knipp
02-11-2010, 09:58 AM
I'm sorry if my comment caused offense, Howard; that was not my intention. I was in the midst of work on another project and wrote in haste.

Howard Schumann
02-11-2010, 10:39 AM
I'm sorry if my comment caused offense, Howard; that was not my intention. I was in the midst of work on another project and wrote in haste. Thanks. No problem. I'm a little crazy right now because of the Olympics and people coming this weekend to visit us from California.

Chris Knipp
02-11-2010, 11:28 AM
I'm relieved, because I value our dialogue very much. Sorry about the disruptions you're dealing with now.

Howard Schumann
02-11-2010, 11:43 AM
I'm relieved, because I value our dialogue very much. Sorry about the disruptions you're dealing with now.

I can't very well talk about how forgiveness works in the movies if I don't practice it in my own life. Anyway, there wasn't that much to forgive, just a misunderstanding.

Chris Knipp
02-11-2010, 12:51 PM
Understood.