| Take your pick: Music
of the Heart is either the touching portrayal
of a real-life teacher and her uphill battle to
teach urban children to play the violin; or
its Mrs. Hollands Opus, a
weepy, by-the-numbers chick-flick that pushes all
the right buttons. I think its somewhere in
between, but the wonderful performance by Meryl
Streep is enough to sway me a bit more toward the
former. Musics
opening credits display photographs from the
seemingly perfect life of Roberta Guaspari (Meryl
Streep, Dancing at Lughnasa). We learn
that she is happily married to a naval officer
and has two marvelous sons. When the credits end
and the picture starts, Roberta is teary,
frazzled mess because her husband just left her.
She and her children, Nick (Michael Angarano) and
Lexi (Henry Dinhofer), are forced to move from
their suburban home.
Since
she doesnt really have much professional
experience other than playing the violin, Roberta
has a tough time finding a job until she meets an
old high school classmate named Brian Sinclair
(Aidan Quinn, In Dreams). Brian is amazed
that Roberta isnt a concert violinist (her
college professor told her that she started
playing too late) and refers her to Janet
Williams, an East Harlem school principal (Angela
Bassett, How Stella Got Her Groove Back)
in need of a music teacher.
At
first, Janet has no interest in hiring Roberta on
account of her lack of teaching experience, but
changes her mind the next day when Roberta wheels
in her two fiddling kids to demonstrate the
discipline that she has taught them. When Janet
balks at the idea of the school being able to
afford violins for students, Roberta proudly
chirps that she purchased fifty to start a
private program years ago. Roberta is hired on a
temporary basis.
Once
her classes start, Roberta finds herself in a
younger version of Sister Act a
class full of disorderly little kids that sword
fight with their bows and use the violin cases to
simulate machine guns. Other teachers are
skeptical, resentful and distant, and she even
finds resistance in the parents of her students.
One angrily states that her kid doesnt need
to learn the music of "dead white men,"
while another calls the principal when
Robertas attempts at teaching discipline
are mistaken for downright cruelty.
Roberta
and her students are able to pull off the big
make-it-or-break-it recital, earning the respect
of parents and teachers alike. Flash to ten years
later, where Robertas program now
encompasses three area elementary schools and
students must win a lottery to enroll in her
classes. But ten days before their big annual
concert, she learns that the funding for her
program will be slashed from the next budget.
Music
is a big career step for horrormeister Wes Craven
(Scream), who directs Pamela Grays (A
Walk on the Moon) script of the true story
that was originally the basis of a documentary. I
half expected to see Freddie Krueger jump out
from behind a desk at the school. The film also
has horrible continuity, with cupboards open in
one shot and magically closed in the next, and
the presence of 3D Doritos in a film that is
supposed to be set in the 1980s. Who do they
think theyre kidding?
While Music
is considerably slowed down by both
Robertas romantic life and her home
remodeling, and the films need to portray
the peril of inner-city life, Streep and the
depth of her character shine like a brightly
polished fiddle. As Roberta, she gets to
constantly hammer home the importance of
practicing while warning her students that
theyre "going to make your parents
sick if you play like that." I smell another
Oscar nomination.
2:04
for some mild adult
situations and the talk of violins
I mean
violence
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