ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,1/10
1,9 k
MA NOTE
En 1993, l'étudiant de 16 ans Brandon Lee s'inscrit au Bearsden Academy, un lycée situé dans une banlieue aisée de Glasgow en Écosse. Ce qui s'ensuit pendant deux ans deviendra la voie d'une... Tout lireEn 1993, l'étudiant de 16 ans Brandon Lee s'inscrit au Bearsden Academy, un lycée situé dans une banlieue aisée de Glasgow en Écosse. Ce qui s'ensuit pendant deux ans deviendra la voie d'une légende.En 1993, l'étudiant de 16 ans Brandon Lee s'inscrit au Bearsden Academy, un lycée situé dans une banlieue aisée de Glasgow en Écosse. Ce qui s'ensuit pendant deux ans deviendra la voie d'une légende.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 13 nominations au total
Brandon Lee
- Self
- (archive footage)
David Tattoo Dave McKinlay
- Self
- (as David McKinlay)
Wam Siluka Jr.
- Stefen
- (voice)
Avis en vedette
A potential serious story is made extremely funny by the pupils that experienced it. The way the documentary is shot is different to others of the same nature and helps the viewer experience all forms of emotions throughout. Plenty of laugh out loud moments!
I do feel sorry for the individual that this film is based upon. It's almost a nothing story really and only in the UK and Scotland would the events of his rather tortured life be a scandal.
People live their lives and dreams in a myriad of ways. This documentary is the story of one such person. A young man with a dream who re-invented himself to achieve a goal that was only possible by doing so. With the help of his mother they conspired a fake identity - for no malicious reason and not due to any dark history- to help him achieve his life dream.
This is a unique film that includes a bizarre range of styles, including animation. More than the actual story...which normally wouldn't justify a film, it is the techniques of the production that real you in and keep you real. It's a strange but entrancing ride. Highly recommended- I doubt you've seen anything like it.
I hope the central character found eventual happiness. There is a sadness in the telling of his story.
People live their lives and dreams in a myriad of ways. This documentary is the story of one such person. A young man with a dream who re-invented himself to achieve a goal that was only possible by doing so. With the help of his mother they conspired a fake identity - for no malicious reason and not due to any dark history- to help him achieve his life dream.
This is a unique film that includes a bizarre range of styles, including animation. More than the actual story...which normally wouldn't justify a film, it is the techniques of the production that real you in and keep you real. It's a strange but entrancing ride. Highly recommended- I doubt you've seen anything like it.
I hope the central character found eventual happiness. There is a sadness in the telling of his story.
It would've been easy for this documentary to follow the current trend of stitching up it's protagonist, in this case Brandon Lee, and to haul him over the proverbial coals for the duration..
However, Jono McLeod has taken a much fresher approach to this than most people would perhaps have expected.
Rather than be patronised and led in an all too obvious direction, the viewer is trusted to draw their own conclusions from the interviews given throughout, by McLeod, Lee, and their grown up classmates.
And therein lies one of the beautiful things about My Old School. Although the main story is already known, any preconceived notions or views are quickly dispelled, as we're introduced to a variety of Lee's former school chums - some closer to the man during his ruse than others.
It's these former classmates that keep this documentary grounded in reality, as they recall the many, and at times bizarre, encounters with Brandon during their penultimate year at high school.
Another major plus of this documentary is, just when you think you've got the whole story worked out, McLeod reveals another twist or turn. Some coming so far out of left field that you'll wonder just what has happened, and more importantly, why?
The director gently opens the many doors of the story, revealing surprises with an ease that keeps the viewer almost enchanted by Lee's growing deceptions. It's this brilliantly paced, and deliberate, drip feed of information that helps the narrative grow from straightforward, if somewhat bizarre scam, to one of almost Machiavellian proportions.
At times funny and exciting, others sad and poignant, My Old School provides many different and diverse points of view, and gets to what's essentially the untold truth of this 27 year old story.
However, a second watch will be more than intriguing, with the benefit of having all the information to hand, as the story unravels again.
As Lee only granted an audio interview, in a master stroke of genius, he's healthily portrayed on screen by Alan Cumming, who performs Drag Race levels of lip-syncing, and captures the essence of the real life Scottish Walter Mitty whom he was meant to play in a film two decades before.
However, Jono McLeod has taken a much fresher approach to this than most people would perhaps have expected.
Rather than be patronised and led in an all too obvious direction, the viewer is trusted to draw their own conclusions from the interviews given throughout, by McLeod, Lee, and their grown up classmates.
And therein lies one of the beautiful things about My Old School. Although the main story is already known, any preconceived notions or views are quickly dispelled, as we're introduced to a variety of Lee's former school chums - some closer to the man during his ruse than others.
It's these former classmates that keep this documentary grounded in reality, as they recall the many, and at times bizarre, encounters with Brandon during their penultimate year at high school.
Another major plus of this documentary is, just when you think you've got the whole story worked out, McLeod reveals another twist or turn. Some coming so far out of left field that you'll wonder just what has happened, and more importantly, why?
The director gently opens the many doors of the story, revealing surprises with an ease that keeps the viewer almost enchanted by Lee's growing deceptions. It's this brilliantly paced, and deliberate, drip feed of information that helps the narrative grow from straightforward, if somewhat bizarre scam, to one of almost Machiavellian proportions.
At times funny and exciting, others sad and poignant, My Old School provides many different and diverse points of view, and gets to what's essentially the untold truth of this 27 year old story.
However, a second watch will be more than intriguing, with the benefit of having all the information to hand, as the story unravels again.
As Lee only granted an audio interview, in a master stroke of genius, he's healthily portrayed on screen by Alan Cumming, who performs Drag Race levels of lip-syncing, and captures the essence of the real life Scottish Walter Mitty whom he was meant to play in a film two decades before.
That the film maker was a former school mate of this outrageous fraudster gives it its charm and sense of fun, its best parts come from this past and yet it is the source of its weak points. Jono the film maker lazily settles with ''it was a laugh'' ''Oh I was completely taken in, omg''. The viewers would say ''Didn't you wanna do some more digging? We have got more than we want to know about his, Bearden? School days, but how did he manage at Dundee University after successfully duping everyone at school? Did he fool medic students up until he didn't? How did he get caught in the end?
Dundee is only 90 min drive away from Glasgow. Why didn't you go and interview his tutors at the medical school or his university friends, for example, yes, his nemesis Cheryl? Also, a decade previously he allegedly failed at Glasgow medical school. Was he dumb? Then his whole pursuit of medical career seems risible, or was he simply unlucky? Come on, Glasgow University must be a few bus stops away from you, Jono. How it didn't interest you to know more about Brian McKinnon the man, your friend and neighbour, instead of settling down with ''Brandon Lee' what a laugh he was''? The film maker is lacking in curiosity.
Dundee is only 90 min drive away from Glasgow. Why didn't you go and interview his tutors at the medical school or his university friends, for example, yes, his nemesis Cheryl? Also, a decade previously he allegedly failed at Glasgow medical school. Was he dumb? Then his whole pursuit of medical career seems risible, or was he simply unlucky? Come on, Glasgow University must be a few bus stops away from you, Jono. How it didn't interest you to know more about Brian McKinnon the man, your friend and neighbour, instead of settling down with ''Brandon Lee' what a laugh he was''? The film maker is lacking in curiosity.
For the material, this could have been a quirky, interesting 1 hour documentary. Instead, they stretched it to almost two hours by presenting a lot of information that was irrelevant and went nowhere. About halfway through the movie, they actually started REPEATING NUMEROUS SCENES! Rehashing the same information and interviews from earlier in the film! In an already marginally interesting film, this was torture!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe music of Orange Juice is featured in the soundtrack. Edwyn Collins, lead singer and songwriter in the band, is also a former pupil of Bearsden Academy.
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- How long is My Old School?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 103 966 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 4 364 $ US
- 24 juill. 2022
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 385 007 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Couleur
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