The Teachers’ Lounge

T
 

İlker Çatak’s school system case study is a masterclass in the art of the slow burn.

The Teachers' Lounge

Blackboard Jungle: Leonie Benesch
Image courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

Germany’s submission for best international feature film recently garnered an Oscar nomination in the category. Filmed in Academy ratio by director İlker Çatak, The Teachers’ Lounge thrusts school politics and human nature under the microscope, proving that teaching is a universally tough profession. Young German middle-school teacher Carla Nowak (Leonie Benesch) follows the rules to a T. An ode to the code of conduct, she contributes to the office coffee pool and is the first among her peers to acknowledge and affirm students’ rights. When she finds herself ensnared in the complex dynamics and politics of the school system, her sense of idealism begins to unravel. 

The microcosm of the teachers’ lounge and surrounding school are the focal points for a complex commentary on the educational system — and the world at large. Without adequate support systems and jurisdiction in place, teachers don the roles of administrator, mediator, and disciplinarian. That’s particularly troubling when the faculty and staff bend or change the rules at will. Carla’s male counterparts take inappropriate actions without consequence, including the racial profiling of a student. There is a certain blindness present among the characters, who are each unable to see their own unconscious bias.

A truthful character study that doesn’t paint in black-and-white, the strength of Çatak’s thriller is in its shifting perspective. Purposefully ambiguous, the introduction of doubt pits one person’s word against another, demonstrating how microaggressions and misunderstandings can lead to violence. The tightly wound script is played out with precise editing and accompanied by an anxious, string-plucking score. The ensemble film highlights an intricate, nuanced turn from the exceptional Leonie Benesch and a whole classroom of talented young performers. Çatak leaves us thinking about all sides of the problem, calling for a way to move forward that doesn’t fail the very students (or, in an allegorical sense, constituents) the governance is mandated to serve.

Original title: Das Lehrerzimmer

CHAD KENNERK

Cast
: Leonie Benesch, Leo Stettnisch, Eva Löbau, Michael Klammer, Rafael Stachoviak, Anne-Kathrin Gummich, Kathrin Wehlisch, Sarah Bauerett, Oscak Zickur, Antonia Luise Krämer, Elsa Kireger, Vincent Stachowiak, Can Rodenbostel, Padmé Hamdemir, Lisa Marie Trense. 

Dir İlker Çatak, Pro Ingo Fliess, Screenplay İlker Çatak and Johannes Duncker, Ph Judith Kaufmann, Ed Gesa Jäger, Music Marvin Miller. 

if... Productions/Arte/Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen-Curzon (UK)/ Sony Picture Classics (US).
94 mins. Germany. 2023. US Rel: 25 December 2023. UK Rel: 22 March 2024. Cert. 12A.

 
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