Art for Teachers of Children

1995
6.2| 1h22m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 02 August 1995 Released
Producted By: Water Bearer Films
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Info

Jennifer, an intelligent but insecure 14-year-old student at a boarding school, seduces her married dormitory counselor, a photographer who has offered to teach her about his art and winds up shooting her in the nude. She is naive, and he manipulates her into an affair that eventually is discovered. Years later, as the photographer is being investigated by the FBI, the adult woman remembers her first love as a case of herself watching the artist who watched her.

Genre

Drama, Romance

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Cast

Director

Jennifer Montgomery

Production Companies

Water Bearer Films

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Art for Teachers of Children Audience Reviews

BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
KnotStronger This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
Humaira Grant It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
fred3f The film is not for everyone. Some might think the acting is bad when it is actually understated and natural. There are no obviously evil acts and there are no stunningly beautiful moments. There is a lot of indecision, an lot of conflicting feelings.Actually this film takes a very honest look at a very complex subject, Sex with minors. It is complex because the characters are trying to deal with love and sex when her body and hormones are still developing and both of their minds and personalities are still developing. Complex also because society has very simplistic views of sex with minors, and complex, because the characters don't know if society is right or if their instincts are right.Some will not like the movie because it leaves unanswered questions. Questions such as who was really in charge of the relationship, who was damaged, did good come out of it, was it art, who was damaged more, did some of the problems with their relationship stem from it being forbidden by society, did some of the problems stem from their own immaturity, and probably most important, was this truly a crime?The film is resolutely neutral on all of this, and it is this neutrality that is its strength. It is the reason for the understated acting, the simple sets, the lack of background music, soft lighting, and the general "flat" presentation. The message is clear. We don't really understand this kind of relationship today, and quick judgments are bound to be shallow.
pinhead33 stunningly terrible acting by both female and male leads...shallow beyond belief [e.g the married 28 y.o man, when asked to be relieved of her virginity by his 14 y.o student replies: "But you are too young and, o dear, o dear, I will go to prison and be raped if I do this thing with you"... You can believe a staggeringly narcissistic person might say this, but why not give us a more interesting character. There is hardly an erotic flicker detectable in the relationship. The girl is so zombie like and bizarre -filing a tissue with her hymenal blood among her papers - that some sympathy is evoked, but we're never given any depth at all.
edgrimley The woman who plays the 14 year old student is obviously at least two, perhaps even six or more, years older than the character. For me that destroyed the whole purpose of seeing the movie - to explore the erotic sentiment and beauty of a sexual relationship between an adult male and a young teenage girl. I found the dialogue unerotic and the cinematography unappealing. Several French and Italian movies or David Hamilton movies do it for me much better...
GingeandLefty Grainy, handheld, sexually raw and explicit. Art for teachers of Children is quintessential underground cinema. Very fascinating, and engaging exploration of sexuality, and questions the nature of underage female/older male sexual relationships, without ever being preachy or condesending to the audience. Jennifer Montgomery's film is autobiographic, she is a very brave person for letting us into her world.