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BBC America premieres Tom Browns Schooldays as a
Thanksgiving Day treat. It is based on Thomas Hughes immensely popular novel,
which was first published in England in 1852 and quickly became a classic of
boys literature. Director Dave Moores film version is a very satisfying
instant classic of holiday programming for the whole family. Part period drama, part
adventure story, part social problem film, Tom Browns Schooldays plucks at
several heart strings, by turns provocative, touching, frightening, heart-warming,
inspiring, and above all, edifying (something movies and novels hardly ever do any more).
The story follows the innocent and untested young Tom Brown (Alex
Pettyfer) from his arrival at Rugby School as an eleven-year-old through many harrowing
trials, missteps, and changes in outlook, to his gradual transformation into a man. Alex
Pettyfer is captivating and convincing in his strong, nuanced, and thoroughly believable
portrayal of a boy suddenly on his own and forced to survive in an environment more like a
prison or boot camp than an elite private academy. Indeed, the novel was written to shed
light on the deplorable conditions in early Victorian boarding schools. Director Moore
casts life at 1820s Rugby in unmistakably Dickensian terms Tom is shown arriving at
an ominous-appearing institution, the buildings and interiors in dreary browns, riotous
and disheveled boys tearing about. It rather feels like Oliver Twist being delivered into
the hands of Fagin.
Arriving at Rugby at the same time as young Tom, the new headmaster Dr.
Arnold (Stephen Fry) has come with the reformers zeal to make educational reform
through Christian charity, mutual respect, and swift justice tempered with kindness. He
faces what in current parlance would be described as an utterly dysfunctional school
system. Under the old boarding school model, teaching faculty left school grounds at the
end of their teaching duties, and the boys looked after themselves. In fact, mob rule took
over at sundown. Life in the dorms distilling and drinking alcohol, gambling,
keeping and using firearms, deflowering girls from the village, brutal hazing, and a
culture of bullying (frequently resulting in serious injury and even death) may be
surprisingly familiar to early twenty-first century audiences. Thomas Hughes
character was based on an actual headmaster and Stephen Frys deeply moving and
warmly human portrayal helps convey why Dr. Arnold became the ideal model of the beloved
English public schoolmaster (as recently incarnated in Professor Dumbledore, headmaster of
Harry Potters Hogwarts School).
At the heart of the schools and the boys problems is the
unbridled sadism of the fifth form student (upperclassman) Flashman (Joseph Beattie), son
of Rugbys wealthiest benefactor, who even the board of directors is afraid to stand
up to. Joseph Beattie is maddeningly on-target in his portrayal of this classic school
yard bully. Boys literature in general, and much Victorian writing, fiction and
non-fiction alike, sought to offer moral instruction, and to this day Tom Browns
Schooldays remains the classic textbook study of bullying. The film sheds bit of
metaphorical light on Darwins "survival of the fittest." The old-school
adults repeatedly parrot the received wisdom that bullying and violence is just boys being
boys and proper preparation as future members of Britains ruling class.
For the dyed-in-the-wool Anglophile, the boys play rugby and cricket,
the English countryside is green and beautiful, and the school is full of recognizable
colorful characters. Period detail is carefully, lovingly and beautifully photographed.
Class distinctions in speech, dress and manner are faithfully rendered. Tom
Browns Schooldays was filmed on location at Rugby, featuring the actual well
where George Arthur was dunked, the chapel where Tom prayed and the fields where the game
of rugby was first played. Many of the extras are played by actual Rugby students. The
substantive performances of Pettyfer, Fry, and Beattie are complemented by the rest of the
cast, memorably Toms allies East (Harry Mitchell) and Tadpole (Dane Carter), and
Toms young ward George Arthur (Harry Smith). Beautifully shot and tightly edited,
the productions two hours fly by in what seems like mere moments.
- Les Wright