Dante Balestra é um professor de filosofia que, após muitos anos de ausência, retorna a Roma para cuidar de seu filho Simone. Ele tem um método de ensino não-conformista e estabelece um rela... Ler tudoDante Balestra é um professor de filosofia que, após muitos anos de ausência, retorna a Roma para cuidar de seu filho Simone. Ele tem um método de ensino não-conformista e estabelece um relacionamento muito especial com seus alunos.Dante Balestra é um professor de filosofia que, após muitos anos de ausência, retorna a Roma para cuidar de seu filho Simone. Ele tem um método de ensino não-conformista e estabelece um relacionamento muito especial com seus alunos.
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The original Catalonian series, Merlí was a conversation about philosophical insights dampening the difficult rites of passage into commonplace adulthood. The Italian version we see is surely from the artist's studio, but the opportunity to enrich the original Catalonian series did not materialize. The Italian version is sanitized and ho-hum. Diluted in many ways. Merlí was grit and guts. Nearly every student was a psychological and sexual coming-of-age story that could be raw or even embarrassing to watch. Note: The original Merlí is better than the U. S. Netflix version and worth seeking out.
I was misled on YouTube into believing this was an LGBT series to watch, and I took that advice and found that I could indeed watch all of it, and at 55 mins of each episode it was a long haul that I mainly skimmed over. This in my opinion is interesting for those who are concerned and interested in the teaching practices of Italy. In my opinion it was blandly filmed and usually I avoid, as I have with this series, the time consuming hook of series in general. Like another reviewer here homosexuality was not, shall we say, enough for me here and I am cross that I was pointed in a direction that finishes between heterosexuals when I hoped for that other orientation. Maybe I was expecting something else, but good though the series is for the ' majority ' I prefer the ' minority ' state and preferably in full blast.
The plot revolves around relevant themes that are barely described and explored in depth.
The first season is quite interesting, although the sexual aspect is not adequately addressed. A main character's sexuality is not fully investigated.
The second season is poorly written, the characters do many things inconsistent with their personalities, and LGBT issues are known to be there but not to be explored in depth.
In conclusion, while the story introduces interesting themes, the lack of depth on crucial topics and inconsistent character development compromise the overall quality of the plot.
The first season is quite interesting, although the sexual aspect is not adequately addressed. A main character's sexuality is not fully investigated.
The second season is poorly written, the characters do many things inconsistent with their personalities, and LGBT issues are known to be there but not to be explored in depth.
In conclusion, while the story introduces interesting themes, the lack of depth on crucial topics and inconsistent character development compromise the overall quality of the plot.
Such a disappoinment, Ity is still a conservative when it comes to gay scenes, they always show more of the heterosexuals love team, an intimate gay scene was cut short... messy storyline. The Professor didn't even live up to Merlí's chaotic character.
Although the series is not available in English, I managed to watch it with subtitles and it was well worth the effort.
It starts like a more typical coming of age story, but soon you'll notice the story developing to much more than that.
Set against the backdrop of Rome (that looks remarkably quiet and green) we follow the story of a philosophy teacher and his students. Although you could question the professors (romantic and parenting) choices, you feel the love for his profession and students in every single class he teaches about the great philosophers and it will make you look back to some of your teachers and wish you had more teachers like him.
The young actors show some remarkable talent but the series is really carried by Alessandro Gassmann and Damiano Gavino who really make their characters come to life.
If you appreciate a teenagers coming of age story against the beautiful decor of Rome, waved into a Philosphy lesson brought to live by a crazy teacher, you'll binge this series for sure.
It starts like a more typical coming of age story, but soon you'll notice the story developing to much more than that.
Set against the backdrop of Rome (that looks remarkably quiet and green) we follow the story of a philosophy teacher and his students. Although you could question the professors (romantic and parenting) choices, you feel the love for his profession and students in every single class he teaches about the great philosophers and it will make you look back to some of your teachers and wish you had more teachers like him.
The young actors show some remarkable talent but the series is really carried by Alessandro Gassmann and Damiano Gavino who really make their characters come to life.
If you appreciate a teenagers coming of age story against the beautiful decor of Rome, waved into a Philosphy lesson brought to live by a crazy teacher, you'll binge this series for sure.
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- How many seasons does A Professor have?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- A Professor
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração55 minutos
- Cor
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