Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.A disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.A disillusioned Englishman who goes to work in a school in a divided Argentina in 1976 finds his life transformed when he rescues an orphaned penguin from the beach.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Joaquín Lopez
- Víctor
- (as Joaquin Lopez Dominguez)
Nicanor Fernandez
- Igor
- (as Nicanor Fernández Montechiarini)
Micaela Breque
- Carina
- (as Mica Breque)
Avis à la une
The Penguin Lessons is a perfectly fine, somewhat comedic, somewhat emotional movie set in a very British feeling boarding school... in Buenos Aires, Argentina during the coup of 1976.
Coogan typically plays himself - a slightly stiff, awkward Brit with some fairly quick wit. However the acting at the start of this film was really poor. The scene where Coogan rescues the titular penguin is incredibly wooden and awkward and I thought I was going to be in for a rough two hours of TV movie standard acting.
That said, it does improve and becomes a sweet tale of a penguin that Coogan initially can't wait to get rid of and then becomes rather attached to. If this movie wasn't based on a real story written by Coogan's character in real life, you wouldn't find it particularly special but knowing that these events (roughly) happened does add some gravitas to the movie.
Overall it's a fine movie, funny in parts and emotional in others. It has a light touch on the politics of the era (fascism and resistance) which some critics have criticised it for but in keeping the tone relatively light the movie remains an easy and enjoyable watch. 7/10.
Coogan typically plays himself - a slightly stiff, awkward Brit with some fairly quick wit. However the acting at the start of this film was really poor. The scene where Coogan rescues the titular penguin is incredibly wooden and awkward and I thought I was going to be in for a rough two hours of TV movie standard acting.
That said, it does improve and becomes a sweet tale of a penguin that Coogan initially can't wait to get rid of and then becomes rather attached to. If this movie wasn't based on a real story written by Coogan's character in real life, you wouldn't find it particularly special but knowing that these events (roughly) happened does add some gravitas to the movie.
Overall it's a fine movie, funny in parts and emotional in others. It has a light touch on the politics of the era (fascism and resistance) which some critics have criticised it for but in keeping the tone relatively light the movie remains an easy and enjoyable watch. 7/10.
The film told a very interesting story of life in Argentina after the coup in 1976. Many issues were covered in the film and we thought the film was fantastic. The whole cast was wonderful and we thought many of the supporting actors had especially strong roles - brilliantly peformed. As the main character, Steve Coogan was extremely funny, and sensitively played a cynical and jaded teacher. Coogan thoroughly deserved his Oscar nomination. Also, if there were Oscars for animals in films the penguin should won one. The film itself felt quite light-hearted and playful in overall tone but did a really good job portraying a very powerful story, worthy of Oscar nominations itself.
My wife loves penguins. Any time there is a movie about penguins, I try to watch it with her. The fact that I ended up loving this particular movie so much was somewhat unexpected. So many things worked well. The balance of comedy and drama. The performances. The story arc. Definitely a "I laughed and I cried" sort of movie. And a quiet film overall. But I laughed harder than I thought I would, many times. Steve Coogan was perfectly cast as a cynical middle aged burned out teacher. The movie is really about him and less the penguin. It effectively does everything it means to do and I would happily see it again soon!
8/10 STARS - The Penguin Lessons was AMC's Screen Unseen movie for March 18 and is based on a book of the same name by Tom Michell. Tom is an English teacher who takes a job at an all-boys boarding school in Argentina just as a military coup is beginning. At the start of the coup, he travels to Uruguay and comes upon a penguin that had been caught in a oil slick and washed ashore. He cleans up the penguin and then tries his hardest to get rid of it, even going so far as to throw it back in the ocean. But all to no avail. The penguin has decided that this human is its family and thus begins the sweet friendship between penguin and man. The backdrop of the story - the coup and resulting dictatorship in Argentina - adds a level of tension, but the heart of this film is about what the main character comes to understand about himself during his time with the penguin and how that journey of self-reflection helps him deal with his pain of past loss and his fear of speaking out on behalf of those in trouble. At the end of the movie, we see a short home video clip of the real penguin during its time there at the boarding school where Tom Michell taught. This is a sweet film with some underpinnings of darker themes, but nothing explicitly violent or sexual is shown. As a comedy drama, there isn't really any "action" to speak of, but that was okay because the story moved along well, the characters were interesting, and that darn penguin deserves an acting award for making me cry! It's a movie I wouldn't have gone to see on my own but I'm glad to have been able to watch it. Recommended. Short video review to come soon.
Not a bad movie. It actually had a plot which you can't say about a lot of movies anymore. Thankfully subtitles did not dominate. The penguin was cute. It dragged a little bit by the end. It would have been nice if they'd done some flash backs or something to give more context why the main character was the way he was for 2/3s of the film. Also I would have liked more time showing how the classmates bonded in the end. It was heartfelt and you could really see how the characters came out of their shells in different ways because of the penguin. I recommend this movie. It has a positive and hopeful message.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe actor Steve Coogan was 58 when he portrayed Tom Michell. In real life, Michell was only 23 when these events took place.
There is a story line about Tom's 13-year-old daughter, which was fabricated for the film. Interestingly, this isn't the first recent penguin film to use this plot device - the 2024 film "My Penguin Friend" also featured a protagonist whose child had died, using this as a way to explain the character's intense attachment to his animal companion.
The 19-year-old character Sofia is also a fictional creation of the film.
- GaffesWhen walking on the beach before he found the penguin, Tom Michell stepped in a large puddle of oil. When he was kneeling at the side of the bathtub cleaning the penguin, the bottoms of his shoes were pristine.
- Citations
Tom Michell: The penguin is not a communist.
- ConnexionsReferences Monty Python's Flying Circus ; Absurde, n'est-il pas? (1969)
- Bandes originalesAvenida de las Camelias
Performed by Colegio Militar de la Nación Band
Courtesy of Tradition Records and Naxos
By arrangement with Source/Q
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Lecciones De Un Pingüino
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 3 294 990 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 1 188 543 $US
- 30 mars 2025
- Montant brut mondial
- 13 590 388 $US
- Durée1 heure 51 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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