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Closed Caption; Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound - Original French language track; English subtitles; Spanish subtitles; Widescreen (2.40:1) enhanched for 16x9 televisions
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Fond De L'Etang [7:35]
2. First Day [12:09]
3. An Experiment [6:41]
4. Violette [5:41]
5. A Choir? [6:15]
6. Mondain [9:09]
7. The Glorious Path [6:15]
8. Changes [5:21]
9. Underground [5:48]
10. Thanks to You [10:15]
11. The Countess [7:48]
12. Up in Smoke [4:37]
13. Adieu [4:52]
14. End Credits [4:13]
Drawing on sentiments previously expressed in cinematic form with such films as Goodbye Mr. Chips, Stand and Deliver, Lean on Me, and Mr. Holland's Opus (to name just a few), The Chorus (a.k.a. Les Choristes) explores the relationship between a beloved educator and his impressionable young students. In this case the mentor is Clement Mathieu (Gerard Jugnot), a middle-aged teacher’s assistant whose tenure in a French boarding school becomes infinitely more interesting when he forms a boys’ choir. It smacks too much of fun to the headmaster, an iron-fisted disciplinarian, and indeed some of the “difficult” students create problems that threaten to sink the venture. But some of the boys, like Pierre Morhange (Jean-Baptiste Maunier) show unusual promise, and Clement puts his career on the line to keep the choir going. Like most movies of this type, The Chorus hews to a formula established long, long ago. There are the predictable problems with the establishment, the difficult student whom the teacher implores to explore his own talent, the moment of crashing despair, and the moment of supreme triumph. And, of course, there’s the Big Performance. But director Christopher Barratier brings an easygoing charm to the proceedings by playing on the expectations of his viewers, giving each familiar sequence a cute little fillip. You may have seen it all before, but The Chorus is a fresh arrangement of a familiar symphony. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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