Won't Back Down (FILM REVIEW)
Won’t Back Down
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Jaded Teacher and Single-Mom Join Forces in Uplifting Tale of Female
Empowerment
In 2010, California passed the
nation’s first “Parent Trigger Law,” a bill which enables a neighborhood with an
underperforming public school to fire the principal, replace the staff and
convert it to a charter, provided a majority of the parents with students
attending it sign a petition. The legislation has proved very controversial thus
far, with opponents alleging that the measure is merely anti-union, whereas the
sponsors call it an overdue reform intended to give kids stuck in so-called “dropout
factories” a fair chance.
Consequently, Won’t Back Down is
opening under a cloud of controversy, which is unfortunate since the film is
otherwise a quite engaging and entertaining tale of female empowerment. The
reason why the picture has generated so much suspicion is that it was produced
by Walden Media, the same studio that just a couple of years ago released
Waiting for Superman, an incendiary documentary that came under attack for blaming
teachers’ unions for the broken educational system.
Although based on actual events that
transpired in Los Angeles, Won’t Back Down is set in the City of Pittsburgh,
where we find an exasperated Jamie Fitzpatrick (Maggie
Gyllenhaal) struggling
to just to survive. Between selling used cars by day and bartending at night,
the single-mom barely has any energy left to attend to the academic needs of
her dyslexic daughter, Malia (Emily Alyn Lind).
Convinced that the lagging 8 year-old
hasn’t learned to read out of neglect, she enters the little girl in a lottery
for one of the few coveted spots opening up at Rosa Parks, a highly-regarded,
nearby charter school. But when Malia’s name isn’t called, the frustrated
mother decides to do something about the school they’re still stuck with.
Inspired by the state’s new “Fail
Safe Law,” Jamie morphs into a tireless child advocate hell-bent on wresting the
reins of control from an administration and staff with low expectations. Along
the way, she enlists the assistance of Nona Alberts (Viola Davis), a jaded
teacher who had all but gone to acceptance.
Initially, Nona is reluctant to get
involved, because she could very easily get blacklisted for trying to bust the
union. Furthermore, she’s an emotional wreck, being overwhelmed by the prospect
of having to raise her son (Dante Brown) on her own in the wake of her
estranged husband’s (Lance Reddick) recent departure.
Nevertheless, Jamie and Nona bond
and, over the objections of bureaucrats, not only garner the requisite number
of parental votes but even talk the teachers into surrendering job security for
performance-based salaries. An uplifting, overcoming the odds Hollywood saga
suggesting that the solution to public education’s host of woes might be as
simple as a couple of women on the verge of a nervous breakdown picking up
picket signs.
In the tradition of Norma Rae and Erin
Brockovich, say hello to Jamie Fitzpatrick and Nona Alberts!
Very Good
(3 stars)
Rated PG for mature themes and mild epithets.
Running time: 121 minutes
Distributor: 20th
Century Fox/Walden Media
To see a trailer for Won’t
Back Down, visit:
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