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Envers et contre tout

Titre original : Stand and Deliver
  • 1988
  • PG
  • 1h 43m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
23 k
MA NOTE
Edward James Olmos, Lou Diamond Phillips, Lydia Nicole, and Eliot in Envers et contre tout (1988)
Official Trailer
Liretrailer1 min 17 s
2 vidéos
99+ photos
BiographieDrame

L'histoire de Jaime Escalante, un enseignant du secondaire qui a inspiré avec succès ses élèves enclins au décrochage à maîtriser l'algèbre.L'histoire de Jaime Escalante, un enseignant du secondaire qui a inspiré avec succès ses élèves enclins au décrochage à maîtriser l'algèbre.L'histoire de Jaime Escalante, un enseignant du secondaire qui a inspiré avec succès ses élèves enclins au décrochage à maîtriser l'algèbre.

  • Director
    • Ramón Menéndez
  • Writers
    • Ramón Menéndez
    • Tom Musca
  • Stars
    • Edward James Olmos
    • Estelle Harris
    • Mark Phelan
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,3/10
    23 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Ramón Menéndez
    • Writers
      • Ramón Menéndez
      • Tom Musca
    • Stars
      • Edward James Olmos
      • Estelle Harris
      • Mark Phelan
    • 119Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 29Commentaires de critiques
    • 77Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 oscar
      • 11 victoires et 7 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Stand and Deliver
    Trailer 1:17
    Stand and Deliver
    Stand And Deliver
    Trailer 0:16
    Stand And Deliver
    Stand And Deliver
    Trailer 0:16
    Stand And Deliver

    Photos142

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    Rôles principaux49

    Modifier
    Edward James Olmos
    Edward James Olmos
    • Jaime Escalante
    Estelle Harris
    Estelle Harris
    • Secretary
    Mark Phelan
    Mark Phelan
    • Cop
    Virginia Paris
    • Raquel Ortega
    Eliot
    Eliot
    • Tito Guitaro
    • (as a different name)
    Adelaida Alvarez
    • Sexy Girl
    Will Gotay
    • Pancho Garcia
    Patrick Baca
    • Javier Perales
    Ingrid Oliu
    Ingrid Oliu
    • Lupe Escobar
    Carmen Argenziano
    Carmen Argenziano
    • Jesse Molina
    Richard Martinez
    • Heavy Metal Boy
    Mark Everett
    • Heavy Metal Boy
    Tyde Kierney
    • Joe Goodell
    Rosanna DeSoto
    Rosanna DeSoto
    • Fabiola Escalante
    • (as Rosana De Soto)
    Bodie Olmos
    Bodie Olmos
    • Fernando Escalante
    Karla Montana
    • Claudia Camejo
    Vanessa Marquez
    Vanessa Marquez
    • Ana Delgado
    Daniel Villarreal
    Daniel Villarreal
    • Chuco
    • Director
      • Ramón Menéndez
    • Writers
      • Ramón Menéndez
      • Tom Musca
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs119

    7,323.3K
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    Avis en vedette

    10bkoganbing

    "You Have Math In Your Blood"

    Back when I was the age of these kids that Jaime Escalante taught I wish I had a math teacher who could have made it as interesting and challenging as he did for the barrio kids he taught in East Los Angeles's Garfield High School.

    Stand and Deliver is one of the best films of the Eighties and one of the most inspiring I've ever seen. Anyone who could get kids fired up about algebra and calculus as Edward James Olmos as Jaime Escalante did has my undying respect.

    Olmos is one of those rare teachers whose very presence in the lives of his students makes them change. So many I had back in the day were just time serving bureaucrats, little better than clerks who took attendance. Of course I had some good ones too, but not in mathematics, I was kind of hopeless in that subject.

    But something that I didn't realize about math then, but that Olmos says and Stand and Deliver emphasizes is that math is the great equalizer. There's no cultural bias in math, no interpretative spins on it, you either know it and do it or you don't. It does help to develop the gray cells, no doubt about it.

    The Mexican-American kids he teaches in Garfield High School have it in their minds they'll be filling station attendants, fast food cooks, or day laborers, striving for better is not something they think about. More than teaching them math skills, we are shown how Olmos makes them believe in themselves and their potential. It's certainly a better life lesson than anything else. I doubt any of Escalante's kids at parties do quadratic equations for entertainment.

    Lou Diamond Phillips has a supporting role in this film which was made earlier than his breakout role in La Bamba, but released later. Of course his billing was adjusted as befit his new star status. He's very good as the kid who makes a deal with Olmos for three textbooks, one for home, one for class, and one for his locker just so his image among his home boys is kept secure. After all as Olmos says, we wouldn't want anyone to get the idea you're really smart.

    Rosanna DeSoto who was LDP's mother in La Bamba is Olmos's wife in Stand and Deliver, loyal and supportive. Other good performances are from Carmen Argenziano as Olmos's supportive school principal and of the kids besides Phillips, you will love young Vanessa Marquez.

    Andy Garcia and Rif Hutton play a couple of educators from the Educational Testing Service, read Standardized Aptitude Test (SAT) who can't quite believe what Olmos has accomplished with these barrio kids. Has to be something wrong here. You have to see the film to see what comes out of their questioning Olmos's competence and integrity.

    Edward James Olmos was nominated for Best Actor in 1988. Unfortunately he was up against a singularly unique performance by Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. The real Jaime Escalante no longer teaches in the USA. A few years ago Escalante went back to Bolivia to give back a little to the people from where he came. That's entirely in keeping with the character of this man that Stand and Deliver tells the story of.

    One of the most inspirational films ever made, don't ever miss it when broadcast.
    sn-38681

    Depicting a one-year-long struggle by an industrious, passionate teacher, "Stand and Deliver" is a drama on the rise of lower-class students to confidence and recognition.

    Despite the massive hurdles on his way to lead the pathetic students into the right track, the teacher, Mr. Escalante manages to reinvigorate the sense of esteem in them by teaching the hard subject of AP calculus, working day-in, day-out.

    The setting on which the plot is mainly based is Eastern Los Angeles Garfield High School, a place packed with students from the poor, deprived Hispanic minority led by a tough teacher who has no intention of backing down.

    Even at the opening, the audience begins to be fed with semiotic elements which signify the issue of stratification and deprivation in Los Angeles. "We're not a minority", that's one piece of large graffiti on a wall in a neighborhood filled with other elements of poverty, giving the initial hint to the viewer about the depiction of the plight and misery of a minority in the movie.

    The teacher is shown behind the roll as he cruises across the neighborhood, setting his eyes on elements of the lower-class life: a group of Latino construction workers on the back of a van, a couple of street vendors and a band of street performers crossing the road as they carry their instruments.

    Escalante is thrust into a class of extremely unruly children, who don't even bother stand up when he steps in the classroom. Interestingly, however, that is no shock to the teacher, as he seems to know very well how to handle them without resorting to violence while remaining completely coolheaded.

    Upon the first encounter, one students asks him if they can discuss "sex" in the class. "We could set sex for homework," Escalante quickly replies in a sarcastic manner, giving the students an impression of sharpness and biting humor.

    To highlight one major component of the Latinos' plight, the director chooses to focus upon the educational system and seeks to convey facts to the audience about how deep the social stratification and wide the gaps are in the American society when it comes to the right to equal education and opportunities.

    Garfield High School, indeed, the director implies, is an embodiment of decades-long discrimination against the Latino community, whose children are the primary target of injustice. But Escalante is there just to fight that up to the end. Of Hispanic origin himself, he seems to have deeply realized the graveness of the matter, which is why he puts the bar higher, much beyond the apparent capabilities of his students.

    The climax of the discrimination comes after the educational inspectors rule that the calculus test be rejected on the assumption that the participants had actually cheated in the exam, showing just how profound is the distrust in minorities even among the academics and the educated, who are supposed to put aside those biased notions and offer everyone the chance to move up the social ladder.

    Ironically enough, the director chooses the two inspectors from minorities, one African American, the other a Latino himself, to suggest that even the educated members of the minority groups are so strongly affected by the white supremacy, never realizing that what they do is indeed representing the predominant view that Hispanic children are inherently incapable.

    "If it was Beverly Hills High School, they wouldn't have sent you to investigate," Escalante tells the inspectors, objecting to the mainstream attitude in the educational system. Escalante believes that if the same scores had been achieved by children from Beverley Hills, the system would have never questioned the results, because they are basically considered supreme and talented.

    The calculus test, from Escalante's viewpoint is a chance for the system to regain the trust of the Hispanic students, but the disapproval from the authorities makes that just a failure, disappointing the students and leaving them in a state of frustration after a months-long hard battle they fought to prove their aptitude.

    Still, the unyielding teacher rises again, taking the hands of the worn-out students and helping them to stand up for the cause once more. He calls them true dreamers. "Tomorrow you'll prove you're the champs," he tells them with vigor, valor and enthusiasm ahead of the second test.

    As the title suggests, the movie is the struggle of a man who never backs down in the face of hardships and obstacles, and sticks to his true mission of delivering the subject he's expected to convey to his students. But that's not the only thing he teaches them. The students learn calculus plus perseverance, something which has been missing in their lives by that time, due to the injustice imposed upon them.

    The dialog and characterization in the movie are both simple. There are no complicated characters and the language is that of the everyday life of a group of Latino students. To an extent, however, the plot is unpredictable, as one keeps wondering what will happen next, especially after the results of the first AP calculus tests are rejected by the Educational Testing Service.

    The music and the editing are smooth, with the costume and makeup design completely fitting the style of the era: loose shirts, young adults with newly grown mustache, and girls with hair-style representing the late 1970s. Together, those elements help with the viewer's full understanding of the theme and the context in which the story has developed.

    The closing scene of the movie comes as Escalante learns about the approval of the second test from the authorities. As he tries to overcome his over-excitement about the news, with a smile on his face, he leaves the principal's office. The camera shows him from behind as he walks away in the corridor, as if he's done with a tremendous mission and is determined to just embark on another journey to continue carrying the huge task on his shoulders somewhere else.
    ketchkev

    Such a wonderful film!

    I really enjoyed this movie. I was watching it on PBS one late night. I am really glad that PBS endorses this film. It is such an influence for kids to do well in school. I hope that it influences teachers to be more supportive and teach better, although I don't have much faith anymore in our broken school systems nowadays. But I still believe in HOPE! I, personally, am not a minority, but you just really hoped the best for the kids in this film. Watching this film, you really get on their side and you really want them to do well. They all have their ups and downs and their home lives are not perfect. The role of Edward James Olmos as Kimo is simply unforgettable. You really admire how Kimo sticks by his kids 100 percent. Teachers like that are so rare. I hope there are teachers like that to pass the torch down to other teachers in the next generation. I look forward to seeing this movie again!
    tfrizzell

    This Gets an "A"

    "Stand and Deliver" is a strong film which is based on a true story. Edward James Olmos received an Oscar nomination as Jaime Escalante, a man who has decided to teach in a Los Angeles school after quitting a high-paying technological job. Escalante is a man who could be described as a "Patton of the classroom". He will do anything and everything to teach his Hispanic students the complicated mathematics of Calculus so they can pass a test which will give them college credit. This is Olmos' show all the way. He proved to be a dominant actor here and it is he who makes the film believable and overall exceptional. The supporting cast is good, led by a young Lou Diamond Phillips. A solid screenplay and smart direction make "Stand and Deliver" a forgotten winner from the 1980s. 4 stars out of 5.
    10carlos-silva

    excellent movie --highly recommend it

    Stand and Deliver has several messages and Edward James Olmos delivers an outstanding performance. Every time I watch it, it leaves me with a good feeling of achievement. I think Mr. Jaime Escalante deserves all the recognition for proving that all kids will rise to whatever level of expectation they are put on. If we lower the levels to the least common denominator, that's as far as they will get. But if we raise it, they can accomplish anything. All they need is GANAS or desire to succeed and a good teacher to motivate them. This should be required material for every school teacher. We need more constructive movies like this instead of the trash that Hollywood is producing lately

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Edward James Olmos remained close friends with Jaime Escalante until Escalante's death on March 30, 2010. Olmos even led a campaign to help pay for Escalante's medical bills, a campaign which included cast members from the movie and former students of Escalante.
    • Gaffes
      The teacher in the classroom says Mayans were the first to contemplate and use the idea of zero. The first recorded zero appeared in Mesopotamia around 3 B.C. The Mayans invented it independently circa 4 A.D.
    • Citations

      Jaime Escalante: [to his students] ... There will be no free rides, no excuses. You already have two strikes against you: your name and your complexion. Because of those two strikes, there are some people in this world who will assume that you know less than you do. *Math* is the great equalizer... When you go for a job, the person giving you that job will not want to hear your problems; ergo, neither do I. You're going to work harder here than you've ever worked anywhere else. And the only thing I ask from you is *ganas.* *Desire.*

      [Passing one boy, he ruffles up the student's hair]

      Jaime Escalante: And maybe a haircut.

      [Everyone laughs]

      Jaime Escalante: If you don't have the *ganas,* I will give it to you because I'm an expert.

    • Autres versions
      The opening Warner Bros. Pictures logo is plastered in the Warner Archive Collection prints with the 2001 variant.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Tough Guise: Violence, Media & the Crisis in Masculinity (1999)
    • Bandes originales
      Stand and Deliver
      Written by Richard Page, Steve George and John Lang

      Performed by Mr. Mister

      Courtesy of RCA Records

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Stand and Deliver?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 mars 1988 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langues
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Stand and Deliver
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Garfield High School - 5101 E. 6th Street, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • American Playhouse
      • Olmos Productions
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 13 994 920 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 411 884 $ US
      • 13 mars 1988
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 13 994 920 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 43 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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