Genre: Drama
Director: Don Argott
Cast: Asa, Tucker Collins, Madi Diaz-Svalgard,
Paul Green, Napoleon Murphy Brown
RunTime: 1 hr 33 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC16
Official Website: http://www.rockschoolthemovie.com/flashIndex.htm
Released Date: 24 November 2005
Synopsis:
Rocks Stars. Guitar Gods. Kids.
At some point in their lives, most everyone dreams of becoming
a rock star: feeling the roar of the crowd; basking in the
adoration of legions of fans; experiencing the adventures
of life on the road. Now imagine fulfilling that fantasy as
a child. Welcome to ROCK SCHOOL.
First time feature documentary filmmaker Don Argott traces
the ups-and-downs of the Paul Green School of Rock Music,
a unique institution founded in Philadelphia in 1999, dedicated
to teaching children ages nine through 17 the ins-and-outs
of rock and roll.
That’s rock and roll, kids. Not hip-hop. Not Britney.
Not Limp Bizkit. But a thunderous roll call of musical greats:
Led Zeppelin. Pink Floyd. Black Sabbath. Carlos Santana. Frank
Zappa.
ROCK SCHOOL follows an entire season of classes, in the process
establishing school founder, director, and self-proclaimed
“überlord” Paul Green as one of the most
complex, contradictory, and unforgettable characters in recent
films. A whirling dervish of manic, pinball-machine energy,
Green is at once sensitive and verbally abusive; generous-spirited
and mercilessly critical. As tornado-like as his tantrum-filled
teaching style can be, however, Paul’s commitment to
his student’s goal of achieving musical greatness is
never in doubt.
Paul’s thorny relationship with his students is the
true subject of ROCK SCHOOL. For while the sight of nine-year-olds
performing Black Sabbath songs outfitted in full heavy metal
regalia is charming, ROCK SCHOOL goes deeper: posing tough
questions about the nature of prodigal talent and flamed-out
youth. Is Paul—a failed guitar God himself—fostering
his students’ gifts or inhibiting them? Is he living
vicariously through his students? Or using the school to fulfill
the rock and roll dream of suspended adolescence?
Filmed cinéma vérité style to create
an intimate portrait of this one-of-a-kind instructor and
his eagerly aspiring students, ROCK SCHOOL reaches its climax
in Bad Doberon, East Germany, where the School of Rock Music
honor roll is invited to perform the music of Frank Zappa.
This special festival dedicated to the prog-rocker’s
oeuvre features Zappa legends such as Ike Willis and Napoleon
Murphy-Brock. . . and the kids prove they can rock with the
very best of them.
A meditation on talent and teaching, ROCK SCHOOL is a celebration
of youthful promise and steadfast dreams. It is also a kick-ass
music movie that should be played loud!
Movie Review:
Paul
Green is the founder and director of (surprise, surprise)
The Paul Green School of Rock Music, and the kind of person
you would just love to hate. He rages and swears and reckons
insults appropriate teaching tools and you know what? He might
just be right. In his school, that is. “Rock School”
is first-time director Don Argott’s documentary about
Paul Green and the “all-stars” from his school,
where kids between the ages of 9 and 17 are trained to be
rock musicians. We’re given an inside look on how this
immediately abrasive man runs his school bulldozes over his
students; come sing along, won’t you? It’s really
kind of fun.
The documentary
is more or less made up of interviews with Green and his protégés,
some of whom are remarkably talented, others wonderfully amusing.
Belonging to the latter category is a pair of twins whose
mother so earnestly encourages them to become full-fledged
rockers that she painstakingly styles mohawks before gigs
and draws “Ozzy” on the kids’ knuckles.
9 year olds in punk make-up, head banging headily onstage?
Funnier than it reads, we can guarantee. Yet nothing comes
across as phony – there is something genuinely beguiling
about these children and their quests in becoming rock musicians.
Sure, they head bang but they take it Very Seriously, thank
you very much.
The entire
movie builds up to a Zappanale Festival in Germany, an annual
festival dedicated to the music of Frank Zappa. By the students’
and Green’s own admission, Zappa is no walk in the park.
Even original band member Napoleon Murphy-Brock acknowledged,
in an interview, the level of difficulty of their songs. So
when the students bring the house down in Germany, we come
to understand Paul Green and his methods and motives. He’s
not just a rocker past his prime, living vicariously through
his students and venting on innocent teens simply because
he couldn’t realize his dream. He has in fact carved
out a niche for himself by being best at what he does: grooming
young stars that have the talent and work ethic to boot. This
is a refreshing change from the “Those can’t do,
teach” mantra that occasionally surrounds feel-good-inspiring-teacher
movies so laden with self-defeat. “Rock School”
is essentially the story of Paul Green at his prime, thumbing
his nose at the state of mainstream music (and perhaps everything
mainstream) these days.
Still,
it’s hard to describe what kind of mentor Paul Green
is. He claims that his job everyday is to visit each room
and yell at the kids, which appears to be true, but in the
end, he’s actually much less of a jerk than he makes
himself out to be. The students seem to understand that too,
and take his insults with a pinch of salt and plenty of good
humour. While he does utilize some colourful vocabulary in
his tirades, he is never condescending, and treats his students
equally. He respects them and their potential talents, which
requires a considerable bite of humble pie – at one
point, he even confesses to practicing in secret when he finds
that the students are catching up to him.
The dilemma,
as Green puts it, that he faces in being “Paul Green
the guitar player” and “Paul Green the guitar
teacher” is therefore an arresting one, and is exactly
the kind of subtle detail that astute movies are made up of.
And what good movie doesn’t have its eccentric motley
crue of characters? In “Rock School”, we have
the amazing talent in C.J. Tywoniak, the 12 year-old guitar
God in the making who’s so astoundingly good that his
solo earned him a lasting ovation at Zappanale, and a fan
in Murphy-Brock. Then there’s Madi Diaz Svalgard, the
rebel to Paul Green’s tyrant – their spats are
so exasperating that they make for ingenious drama. Lastly,
there’s Will O’ Connor, the suicidal teen who
made good from his experience with Rock School. Basically,
it’s an eclectic cast any director would have killed
for; Paul Green’s school is dysfunctional, and great
to watch because of it.
And did
we mention the music? Oh, the music. Paul Green could not
have said it better when he announced, “I wanted to
be a rock star in 1972, I’d never want to be a rock
star now!” It isn’t a groundbreaking documentary
like Michael Moore’s “Bowling For Columbine”,
nor is it near the caliber of 2002’s “Spellbound”,
but “Rock School” has its endearing qualities,
and a superior soundtrack (played live by teens!) in its arsenal;
what’s not to like?
Movie
Rating:
(A
pedestrian documentary lit up by its army of fascinating characters;
surely the awesome music deserves a star on its own)
Review
by Angeline Chui
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