Rock School Movie Review
Rock School Review

"Rock School" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Don ArgottProducer : Don Argott,Sheena M. Joyce
Screenwiter :
Starring : Paul Green
Jack Black’s wacko substitute teacher/heavy metal proselytizer in School of
Rock may understand the primal majesty of a blistering riff, but he has nothing
on Paul Green. Green, the founder and frontman of Philadelphia after-school
program The Paul Green School of Rock, is a former axe man-turned-music teacher
who, every afternoon, teaches 120 boys and girls ages 9-17 how to master the
intricate, roaring classics by Zeppelin, Sabbath, and Zappa. A hyperactive
mentor with a mouth straight out of The Last Detail, Green molds his students
into hard rock disciples through a mixture of rigorous preparation, music
history lectures, and profane, demeaning tirades that frequently end with kids
in tears. Completely charismatic and utterly insane, he’s a divisive subject
whose alternately supportive and abusive methods embody distinctly opposing
educational philosophies, and he proves the fascinating center of Don Argott’s
power chord-driven documentary Rock School.
Argott’s film charts Green and his students as they prepare for upcoming
tribute shows to Black Sabbath and Frank Zappa, the latter of whom is being
commemorated at the Zappanale festival in Germany. Yet the tension that arises
from these rehearsals is only the documentary’s superficial focus; the real
spotlight is on the teaching techniques of Green, an out-of-control,
narcissistic virtuoso who secretly admits to practicing guitar in his spare
time lest his students surpass him in skill, as well as employing “good cop,
bad cop” stunts to motivate and inspire his headbanging charges. Extremely
uninhibited in front of the camera, Green – a slightly pudgy thirty-something
with a slowly receding hairline and a predilection for t-shirts and jean shorts
– is a warm, friendly, and funny presence who loves to regale his student body
with stories about his personal life and his music heroes, though his kindness
is complemented by frequently nasty exhortations to practice more, stop
listening to lame music (a problem for Madi Diaz, who arrives at the school
with dreams of becoming the next Sheryl Crow) and quit acting like childish
brats. At once charmingly funny (describing one student as having “that Chris
Robinson, future heroin user look about her”) and despicably mean (“I will kill
your family,” he tells a few unruly troublemakers), he’s as polarizing a figure
as has been seen in recent cinema.
“I’m probably not qualified to teach,” Green admits early on, only to
immediately insist “I’m a really good teacher.” What Argott’s film makes clear
is that both statements are equally true. From pint-sized guitar prodigy C.J.
Tywoniak (who Green grinningly claims “is going to make us all a lot of money”)
and suicidal misfit Will O’Connor to Ozzy-imitating nine-year-old twins Asa and
Tucker Collins and the oft-criticized Madi, the kids express respect and fear
for their instructor. While Green’s results are difficult to argue with –
especially during the final, show-stopping Zappa performances – it’s hard to
condone his insensitive and outrageous behavior toward children whose greatest
crimes, at least according to the film, revolve around not practicing as
maniacally as Green demands. When one boy accidentally looks at his hand while
trying to master a song, Green attacks his manhood (“Only girls look at their
fingers! Do you want to be in The Bangles?”). And when a Philadelphia Inquirer
reporter comes to do a piece on the school, Green inconsiderately discusses his
“Will O’Connor Suicide Award” (which goes to the mopiest, attention-craving
student) to the chagrin of Will, who correctly labels his teacher – seemingly
unwilling to grow up and act like an adult – as having a juvenile “Peter Pan”
complex.
Green’s hysteria does produce some hilarious quotes (“Don’t make fucking
mistakes! Not on ‘Rebel Yell!’”; “Now we’re going to play some Sabbath, and
that’s no laughing matter”) even as he simultaneously fascinates and repulses.
Wisely, though, Rock School – unafraid to shy away from its primary subject’s
maddening conduct but wise to not dwell on it for too long – also focuses
attention on the school’s endearing musical prodigies. Some, such as the
awe-inspiring C.J., are both artistically gifted and articulate about both
their rock-god dreams and the benefits of Green’s unconventional educational
efforts, which appear as harmful to those who don’t have futures in rock music
(such as Will) as they are helpful to those with legitimate career prospects.
Like the amiably superficial Spellbound, Argott’s film provides frustratingly
little insight into the kids’ various family lives – while a few parents get
screen time, there’s a dearth of footage concerning the students’ home
environments and other interests. And as a result, Green winds up receiving the
only fully three-dimensional portrait. Yet this one off-key note is largely
drowned out by Rock School’s frequently hilarious, sometimes galling portrait
of one man’s attempts to uphold, and pass along to future generations, the
flamboyant, ferocious, innovative spirit of classic rock.
Free bird!
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Review by Nicholas Schager
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