Teaching Mrs. Tingle Movie Review
Teaching Mrs. Tingle Review
"Teaching Mrs. Tingle" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Kevin WilliamsonProducer : Richard N. Gladstein,Cathy Konrad
Screenwiter : Kevin Williamson
Starring Helen Mirren, Katie Holmes, Marisa Coughlan, Jeffrey Tambor, Barry Watson, Michael Mckean, Lesley Anne Warren, Molly Ringwald, Vivica A Fox
Once upon a time there was a writer named Kevin, who wanted to make a big
splash in Hollywood. He wrote a movie called Killing Mrs. Tingle, which didn’t
sell, so he tried again. The next time he wrote a movie called Scream, which
single-handedly revived the horror genre, paving the way for big horror
flicks... and even small ones like The Blair Witch Project.
And then he made a TV show called Dawson’s Creek, which was also a huge
success. And another horror flick. And Scream 2. And then this writer was
the hottest thing on Sunset Blvd., and even Killing Mrs. Tingle started to look
good. Miramax bought it. They even let the guy direct.
Uh-oh. Mr. Williamson may have a great gift for writing, but it’s not on
display here. There was, it turns out, a good reason Mrs. Tingle didn’t get
sold: It’s not that good of a story.
That story involves a wicked schoolteacher (Mirren), who tortures her pupils
ruthlessly just for kicks. When valedictorian-wannabe Holmes is wrongly
implicated for cheating, Tingle threatens expulsion. Naturally, Holmes and
friends decide to make the woman a hostage in her own home and teach her a
lesson.
So much fun could have been had with this movie, but so little is (see also:
Suicide Kings). Though it’s ostensibly a black comedy, the jokes are deathly
flat. There’s no “thrill” to speak of. No scares. Just some workmanlike
acting that plods through about 90 minutes of obvious tedium before the
also-obvious ending arrives. It’s not a hideously bad picture, it’s just so
unmemorable that I can hardly bring myself to form an opinion about it.
Changing the title to Teaching Mrs. Tingle, big surprise, has not made one bit
of difference in the quality of the picture, either.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





