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La grande triche

Original title: Cheaters
  • TV Movie
  • 2000
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Jeff Daniels, Luke Edwards, Blake Heron, Jena Malone, Anna Raj, Dov Tiefenbach, and Dan Warry-Smith in La grande triche (2000)
TV Series
Play trailer1:28
2 Videos
7 Photos
Drama

One teacher and his students know they can win the state's academic contest with the right amount of study, the right application, and the right answers. When one of them steals the test pap... Read allOne teacher and his students know they can win the state's academic contest with the right amount of study, the right application, and the right answers. When one of them steals the test papers, will they cheat their way to the trophy?One teacher and his students know they can win the state's academic contest with the right amount of study, the right application, and the right answers. When one of them steals the test papers, will they cheat their way to the trophy?

  • Director
    • John Stockwell
  • Writer
    • John Stockwell
  • Stars
    • Jeff Daniels
    • Jena Malone
    • Paul Sorvino
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Stockwell
    • Writer
      • John Stockwell
    • Stars
      • Jeff Daniels
      • Jena Malone
      • Paul Sorvino
    • 63User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    Cheaters
    Trailer 1:28
    Cheaters
    Cheaters
    Trailer 1:27
    Cheaters
    Cheaters
    Trailer 1:27
    Cheaters

    Photos6

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    Top cast89

    Edit
    Jeff Daniels
    Jeff Daniels
    • Dr. Gerard Plecki
    Jena Malone
    Jena Malone
    • Jolie Fitch
    Paul Sorvino
    Paul Sorvino
    • Constantine Kiamos
    Luke Edwards
    Luke Edwards
    • Darius Bettus
    Blake Heron
    Blake Heron
    • Matt Kur
    Dov Tiefenbach
    Dov Tiefenbach
    • Irwin Flickas
    Dan Warry-Smith
    Dan Warry-Smith
    • Paul Kurgan
    Anna Raj
    • Agnieska Maryniarczyk
    Dominik Podbielski
    • Dominik Wesolowski
    Ned Eisenberg
    Ned Eisenberg
    • Robert Clifford
    Robert Joy
    Robert Joy
    • Larry Minkoff
    Lenka Peterson
    Lenka Peterson
    • Mrs. Plecki
    Alex Poch-Goldin
    Alex Poch-Goldin
    • Jerry Marconi
    • (as Alex Poch Goldin)
    Karen Glave
    Karen Glave
    • Corrine Davis
    Marcia Bennett
    Marcia Bennett
    • Joan Isenberg
    Ed Wadley
    • Statistician
    Jackie Richardson
    Jackie Richardson
    • Mrs. Fadely
    Jeff A. Wright
    • Josh Haden
    • (as Jeff Wright)
    • Director
      • John Stockwell
    • Writer
      • John Stockwell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews63

    6.73.9K
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    Featured reviews

    9insomniac_dreamer

    "Isn't Cheating Wrong?"

    What I absolutely loved about this movie is the fact that it displays a genuine moral dilemma without necessarily preaching anything. It doesn't provide viewers a standpoint for moral ascendancy, instead, the viewers get the pleasure of interpreting the situation, thus gaining that threshold for ascendancy.

    I'd say the film did play out a bias, and the bias was in favor of the students from Steimetz High. I'd say that it is rather a fair bias, because it is rare to see the cheaters as the protagonist. Amidst this, they weren't portrayed as the over-glamorized heroes that will promote a cheating society. What John Stockwell did was to give us a dose of reality, an arena for sympathize with cheaters, at the same time, displaying the consequences of the human act.

    I love the mixture of documentary footages. Opening Credits was awesome, wherein there were raw footage in grainy stock of actual American high school. It played greatly on the emotional framework that the film worked on and I'm so glad my parents were able to find a copy of the film on DVD.
    Banky-4

    Very Well Done.

    This is a complicated movie, because you're not always sure you SHOULD be rooting for the main characters.

    The film is about the apparently true story (I never heard about it) of how a teacher encouraged his students to cheat on an academic decathalon. The story was well told, but you're never really made to feel pity towards the characters. The story is told fairly and not just to be entertaining. I suppose it's a morality tale to a certain extent. But, be warned, there is a fair amount of foul language, more than I expected.

    Still, a great and well done movie, and I feel will please those who are curious.
    7BDeWittP

    This movie makes you think

    I like movies that make me think, not just about contemporary issues, but about ourselves, as human beings. Cheaters is a great movie that does exactly that. The questions it raises are very good ones. Is cheating, even when the deck is stacked against you, wrong, or is it just against the rules? Or as the students in the movie discussed, do two wrongs make a right? Or do two wrongs make it even? Cheaters is a movie about the 1994-95 Steinmetz High School students entering the years academic decathlon, a mammoth competition featuring numerous tests, an interview, and a super quiz. The team that is fielded by their dedicated and respected teacher, Dr Plecki, immediately has three strikes against it: they have no experience, no support from most of the school staff and students, and they're up against the perennial powerhouse and cross-town rival: Whitney Young.

    The Academic Decathlon, at least in Chicago and the State of Illinois, isn't really a competition, because Whitney Young has been winning for ten straight years. As Dr Plecki (played fabulously by Jeff Daniels) says "they live, breathe, and eat the decathlon...they recruit for it." So, right away, we know this is definitely a long shot because we know what they're up against. So the title is obviously self-explanatory, of course the only chance they have to win is to cheat.

    Although we know this story would have never been told had they not gotten caught cheating, it's not about the destination, it's about the journey. In preparation for the regionals, we see the team really working hard. They fight tooth and nail, but just make it to the state finals, finishing in fifth place. "Jerry, keep it, you didn't know what you were up against" says the Whitney Young coach to Dr Plecki, after both bet money on their teams. We really know these words are heartbreakingly true, and we agree with Dr Plecki when he congratulates the team on a great effort ("I think you guys should be proud of yourselves"). Indeed, the team did very well, considering what they really were up against.

    This is the point where things heat up, as one of the students manages to get a copy of the state test, and things really start heating up. Dr Plecki, when he gets the news, encourages the team to use the test to study, if they all agree. When they get to the State competition, using planned tricks, quick and private ways of getting signals, they win with a big improvement in their scores from their regional performance. Whitney Young believes, through suspicion, that they did indeed cheat. The logic being that it is statistically impossible for anyone to have their scores increase that dramatically in only three weeks. We, as an audience who can't help but root for the underdogs, find us hoping they don't get caught and those Whitney Young rich spoiled brats get a dose of their own medicine.

    The performances by the teacher and students are fantastic. Jeff Daniels is a very underrated actor and it's refreshing to see him give such a great performance here. He gives the character of Dr Plecki an excellent illustration of anger, confusion, insight, and frustration. The students, especially the one played by Jena Malone (as Jolie Fitch, who, according to the film, helped assemble the team) are just as convincing in their bonding to keep the code of silence. The lawyer for the board of education, who questions them about their cheating in one of the later scenes, said it best: "These kids may be some of the most skilled liars I've ever encountered. They looked me in the eye and lied to me. They scared me."

    I will not give away the ending, only that it leads to some very good arguments and the "city gripped by 'Did they or didn't they?' fever." Did Dr Plecki do right? Do you sometimes have to break the rules to change them? Would they have questioned Steinmetz if it were a rich, WASP school, as one of the Steinmetz students points out? These are all questions that the film raises, and leaves for the audience to decide.

    The movie doesn't ask anyone to condone cheating, nor does it say that we should condone it. All the movie does is ask the audience to pay attention, and raise questions. It is fair to both sides. I liked the fact that one thing the movie does make clear is: right, wrong, or indifferent, our society is not fair. It doesn't say that the actions of Dr Plecki and the students are okay, but they're understandable due to the circumstances.

    I would recommend this film be viewed by all students in their English classes or with their parents. I also believe very strongly that anyone who watches this will be asking themselves questions about the values, morals, and quandaries of today's society. This film is a must see for all students, educators, and parents.
    pompaj

    An easy to relate to film that tells a unique story

    Cheaters is one of the best cable films. It's good because it makes a statement, which is that cheaters do prosper and that winning does count, contrary to what we are told throughout life. It justifies the characters' decision to cheat very nicely and it makes for an interesting story. It's not an amazing film that you can't believe they thought of, but one that's enjoyable to watch, partially because it is so plausible. Jeff Daniels plays the teacher who goes against policy and he is really convincing. The kids themselves are mostly cliches, but it doesn't matter because this isn't a movie about character, but about story, and the story is strong enough to make it a very good film.
    VicDawg

    When there is no "competition," there is no such thing as cheating.

    I am not normally one to post a review unless its a movie I hate (check out my review of Titanic), but after reading some ignorant reviews posted by people who have obviously never had to live in the type of environment that these kids had to, I decided to put things into perspective. I, myself, live in an empoverished area full of minorities. Poverty + Minorities = no one giving a rats ass about you. What these kids did was far more important than a simple academic decathlon, what they did was throw a brick through the window of the owner's box.

    When you pit the rich against the poor, the rich will always win. There is no competition. And where there is no competition, there is no cheating.

    Anyone who believes that this film glorifies dishonesty and deceit is part of the problem.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film is based upon the events of the infamous Steinmetz Cheating Scandal that took place at the Illinois Academic Decathlon State Championship in 1995, in which the real-life Dr. Gerald Plecki and his seven students did lose to Whitney Young High School at the Regional Decathlon Championship but mysteriously won the State Championship. Later the students were accused of cheating by the State Decathlon Committee, the Department of Education, and Whitney Young (which lost to Steinmetz at the competition). It was eventually discovered that the students did cheat, although several of the students to this day maintain that they did not.
    • Goofs
      When Dr. Plecki and the students are watching "Stand and Deliver" at his house, the scenes from that movie are shown out of order in "Cheaters".
    • Quotes

      Irwin Flickas: It was a multiple choice test. Nobody told me you could only pick one answer!

    • Connections
      Features Envers et contre tous (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Roads
      Written by Geoff Barrow, Beth Gibbons and Adrian Utley

      Performed by Portishead

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 20, 2000 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tricheurs!
    • Filming locations
      • Central Technical School, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Nitelite Entertainment
      • De Passe Entertainment
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1
      • 1.78 : 1

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