The Teachers' Lounge

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The Teachers' Lounge
File:The Teachers' Lounge poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by İlker Çatak
Produced by Ingo Fliess
Written by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Marvin Miller
Cinematography Judith Kaufmann
Edited by Gesa Jäger
Production
company
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Distributed by Alamode Film
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • 18 February 2023 (2023-02-18) (Berlin)
  • 4 May 2023 (2023-05-04) (Germany)
Running time
99 minutes[1]
Country Germany
Language <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • German
  • Turkish
  • Polish
  • English
Box office $5 million[2]

The Teachers' Lounge (German: Das Lehrerzimmer) is a 2023 German drama film directed by İlker Çatak, who co-wrote the screenplay with Johannes Duncker.[3][4] Leonie Benesch stars as a teacher tasked with finding out which of her students is responsible for a series of thefts.

It was nominated to compete for the Panorama Audience Award at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival, where it had its world premiere on 18 February 2023.[5] Released to critical acclaim, the National Board of Review named The Teachers' Lounge one of the top five international films of 2023.[6] It was nominated for Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards.[7]

Plot

Students from the 7th grade class of idealistic teacher Carla Nowak, a new transfer to the school, are pressured by other teachers to identify which of their classmates could be the most likely suspect for a series of thefts from the teachers' lounge. Carla encourages them to stay silent if they wish, but the other teachers pursue the issue and later force the male students in Carla's class to turn in their wallets for inspection. Upon discovering that a student of Turkish heritage,[8] Ali, is carrying a lot of money, the teachers accuse him of theft; however, at a meeting with Ali's parents, the parents inform the teachers that the money was Ali's allowance, and they accuse the teachers of racially profiling Ali. Later, after witnessing a colleague steal money from the lounge's piggy bank, Carla decides to investigate the theft herself. Using her laptop, she secretly records her jacket, and gets footage of an unknown person in a distinctive blouse taking money from her wallet.

Carla searches around the school and discovers an administrative colleague, Friederike Kuhn, is wearing the same blouse as on the video. Kuhn is also the single mother of Oskar, a bright but quiet student in Carla's class whom Carla admires. Carla privately attempts to get Kuhn to confess and return the money, but Kuhn is flustered and outraged at Carla's accusation and throws her out. Carla escalates to the principal, who is also unable to get Kuhn to admit to the theft. Kuhn becomes deeply upset during the interrogation and storms out after being put on leave, while Carla is discomfited by the principal's suggestion to get the police involved, preferring to keep the matter private. However, she is shocked when the principal notes that Carla will also have to be put under investigation, as her secret recording of the teachers' lounge violated the privacy of her colleagues.

At a parent-teacher meeting, the parents are displeased to hear of the teachers' interrogation of the students, particularly when their wallets were taken. As Carla struggles to take control of the situation, Kuhn crashes the meeting and informs the parents that Carla is being charged with making secret recordings, and that she is not to be trusted. A shaken Carla flees to the bathroom, where she struggles to control a panic attack. The students begin to gossip as well, with Oskar insisting that his mother is not the thief, and becoming upset that his mother has been fired. The students rally on behalf of Oskar and refuse to do homework or participate in class. Oskar later attacks a student who failed to participate in this solidarity and then steals Carla's laptop, striking her with it and then escaping to the nearby river, where he disposes of the laptop.

Carla, understanding that Oskar was trying to protect his mother, covers for him and is against pursuing disciplinary action, but the other teachers are wary of keeping Oskar in class due to his violent tendencies. The meeting is interrupted by Carla's students, who run the school newspaper and had scheduled an interview with her. After a regular and innocent set of questions, the students abruptly begin interrogating Carla about the secret recording, the thefts, accusations against Ali, and Kuhn's dismissal. Carla, caught off-guard, gives vague and broad responses, and is refused the opportunity to review the interview ahead of the printing of the newspaper. When it is published, Carla is dismayed to find her statements twisted and taken out of context. The paper quickly spreads and angers the other teachers, who blame Carla for not being more cooperative and forthcoming. The principal decides to ban distribution of the newspaper and suspends Oskar.

Oskar returns to class regardless, and the principal threatens to have him removed, which could get him expelled. After failing to get Kuhn to collect her son, Carla has the class leave with another teacher and sits quietly with Oskar. He quickly solves the Rubik's cube that she had gifted him earlier in the film, and the credits show him being carried out of school by police officers, calm and dignified.

Cast

Carla is of Polish ancestry. Michael O'Sullivan of the Washington Post stated that the actress portrays Carla in a "subtly expressive" manner.[9]

Production

The inspiration for the story came from a school visit in Istanbul where İlker Çatak and Johannes Duncker witnessed "these two boys in class that were actually stealing. And we all knew it, but nobody wanted to be the snitch. But at some point, the school found out and they came into the class, and it was kind of a trap for them, where they said, 'Girls — out. Boys — put your wallets on the table, and come to the front of the room.' And they found all that money in their pockets. When we talked about it later, Johannes and I thought it could be a good kickoff for a story. And then Johannes told me a story about his sister, who's a math teacher in Cologne in Germany, who had a similar kind of thing going on with thefts. There was a secretary involved and all. What we thought was interesting is when a society, such as a school community, is being poisoned with all this speculation and these prejudices and stuff like that. We quickly realized that this could also be a film about our times, about the societies that we live in."[10]

The film was created in three years, beginning from when the idea was made.[citation needed] The film was shot in 27 days at a disused school in Hamburg that was scheduled to be razed.[11]

Çatak stated that he made Carla a younger character so she would have some idealism, and that the Carla character was inspired by "two or three very good teachers" though they were older than Carla.[12] The director did not want to make Carla as an older teacher with burnout, a common trope. For the student characters, the director chose actors who had no previous experience in professional film as a way of accurately portraying students.[12]

Release

The film was an official selection at the 48th Toronto International Film Festival and 28th Busan International Film Festival in 2023.[13][14]

Reception

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 108 reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A smart and provocative modern parable with the heart of a thriller, The Teachers' Lounge brilliantly uses its setting as the backdrop for a look at how quickly even tight-knit communities can be destabilized."[15] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 84 out of 100, based on 17 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[16] Robbie Collin of The Telegraph awarded the movie four stars out of five, writing that “It’s a sound lesson in politics – or is it biology? – but more importantly, it’s a chalk-snappingly tense watch.”[17]

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung found that in the film, "Much of what concerns society at large - the difficulty of dealing with diversity, multidimensional identities, cultural stereotypes - is made concrete in school, as if under a magnifying glass".[18] while NDR wrote, "The Teachers' Lounge is a bitter lesson in self-righteousness. There is something both comical and tragic about the fact that the person with the best intentions sets off the worst chain reaction. This drama eludes a clear reading - which makes the cinema experience all the more interesting!"[19]

A positive review for Filmdienst wonders, "Despite all the enthusiasm that the film, which was tense from start to finish, generated at the premiere at the Berlinale, it was rightly noted that it was not entirely clear what The Teachers' Lounge was actually trying to achieve. The director İlker Çatak says that it's not about making a statement, 'but about asking a question'."[20]

Der Tagespiel, considering the film in a broader context, wrote that it "shows very pointedly how little can be enough to make dialogue impossible in our highly sensitive times. School is the exemplary place where our “culture wars” are fought because this is where the next generation is already being prepared for the demands of the future."[21]

Alissa Wilkinson of The New York Times wrote that the work "is strongest on the allegorical level."[8]

Accolades

Award Date Category Recipient Result Ref.
Academy Awards 10 March 2024 Best International Feature Film The Teachers' Lounge Nominated [22]
Alliance of Women Film Journalists 4 January 2024 Best Non-English-Language Film Nominated [23]
Astra Film Awards 6 January 2024 Best International Feature Nominated [24]
Best International Actress Leonie Benesch Nominated
Berlin International Film Festival 25 February 2023 Panorama Audience Award for Best Feature Film The Teachers' Lounge Nominated [5]
Cicae Art Cinema Prizes Won
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards 12 December 2023 Best Foreign Language Film Nominated [25]
European Film Awards March 2024 European Film Academy Lux Award Nominated [26]
9 December 2023 Best European Screenwriter İlker Çatak, Johannes Duncker Nominated [27]
Best European Actress Leonie Benesch Nominated
European University Film Award The Teachers' Lounge Nominated
German Film Awards 12 May 2023 Best Fiction Film Won [28]
Best Director Ilker Çatak Won
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role Leonie Benesch Won
Best Screenplay İlker Çatak, Johannes Duncker Won
Best Cinematography Judith Kaufmann Nominated
Best Editing Gesa Jäger Won
Best Film Score Marvin Miller Nominated
Goya Awards 10 February 2024 Best European Film The Teachers' Lounge Nominated [29]
Haifa International Film Festival 6 October 2023 Best International Film Nominated [30]
Les Arcs Film Festival 23 December 2023 Cineuropa Award Pending [31]
National Board of Review 6 December 2023 Top Five International Films Won[lower-alpha 1] [32]
Palm Springs International Film Festival 15 January 2024 Best International Feature Film Pending [33]
St. Louis Film Critics Association 17 December 2023 Best International Film Nominated [34]
Satellite Awards 17 February 2024 Best Motion Picture – International Nominated [35]
Valladolid International Film Festival 28 October 2023 Best Editing Gesa Jäger Won [36]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 10 December 2023 Best Foreign Language Film The Teachers' Lounge Nominated [37]
Women Film Critics Circle 18 December 2023 Best Foreign Film by or about Women Nominated [38]

See also

Notes

  1. This award does not have a single winner, but recognizes multiple films.

References

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External links