School Life follows a year in the lives of two inspirational teachers in the only primary-age boarding school in Ireland. Headfort School — with its 18th century buildings, secret doors, and magical woodlands — is a revered institution that sees students attend from all over the world, staff made up of former students, and educators who have stayed there for decades, lending the school their characteristic idiosyncrasies. Married teaching duo John and Amanda Leyden have sat at the front of Headfort's classrooms for 46 years. Shaping thousands of minds for nearly half a century, now the unthinkable looms: what would retirement mean? Who will keep them young if they leave?
For John, rock music is just another subject alongside Math, English, Scripture, and Latin, all of which are taught in a collaborative and often hilarious fashion, employing the Socratic method in a way that ensures a continuous learning experience for the teachers as well as their students. Tucked away in a cellar that's home to the school's two rock bands, John nurtures a special kind of youth revolution that teaches responsibility and independence in equal measure as he tells the kids they can play whatever they like in their unique sanctuary space.
For Amanda, the key to connecting with children is through books, and she uses all means available to ensnare their minds. Her office is packed to the rafters with thousands of titles from every genre and for every taste. The children sit transfixed as she takes them on magical journeys with fantastical characters from tales of all kinds.
Is the school an anachronism in this globalized world or a clever remake of the flawed British public school model? The epitome of establishment, it's presided over by a leftward-leaning headmaster, also a former student, who eschews class in favor of achievement, but retains the links that connect Headfort to the levers of power. As John and Amanda ponder retirement, the film quietly ponders: Will their intimate, caring cultivation of future generations live on, or will it vanish like so many community-centered practices?
School Life is a joyful and humorous account of the success that schools can achieve when students are invited to play a role in their own curriculum, and offers a wealth of strategies and techniques for fostering greater educational outcomes for schools of all types.
"A sweet film... Recommended for both college and general adult levels... This documentary would support courses in Education and also academic areas that might explore Irish and British-based school systems or society." — Educational Media Reviews Online
"Very much worth the wait...Exudes both charm and authority" — IDFA
"As charming, intimate and warm-hearted an observational documentary as you'd ever want to see...School Life also provides an empathetic example of what it takes to enable children to learn and flourish as well as an examination of exceptional teachers and an up-close illustration of just how it is they do what they do so well." — Los Angeles Times
"The cutest documentary that Frederick Wiseman never made...Finds a finite poetry in the nature of education itself." — Indiewire
"Gentle but keen-eyed documentary celebrates contemporary, constructive methods of elementary education, while also taking cozy comfort in the more longstanding aspects of the institution...Filmmaking is delicately executed in every department." — Variety
"Delightful crowd-pleaser...An irresistibly admiring portrait...A conventionally mounted tribute to a genial, decidedly British form of eccentricity." — The Hollywood Reporter
"A rambunctious collage of a self-contained self-sustaining world, with its own rules of play and concerns" — RogerEbert.com
"Charming...The picture's easygoing structure is part of its charm- it mimics, perhaps, the passage of time at Headfort itself. The minutes we spend watching the movie fly by like the seasons" — Time
"Endearing documentary about an unusual Irish prep...Imagine Fred Wiseman directing a remake of School of Rock but in Ireland and you're almost there, but with more incidental music and a closer focus on the charming characters." — The Guardian
"An irresistibly charming journey of free flowing images and situations...A strong snapshot of an idyllic schooling experience." — Huffington Post
"Gentle documentary of a year at an Irish boarding school...The immersion invites viewers to form their own thoughts on the children and teachers, and the value of the education offered at Headfort." — San Francisco Chronicle
"An immersive look at the transformative power of education...Joyous, mind-opening experience...Moving, heartwarming look at youth, thoughtful discourse, and the emotional and intellectual power of artistic endeavors...Succeeds in being a joyous, human look at the role that school, education, and most importantly, teachers have in the lives of such malleable minds" — The Playlist
"Paints a fascinating picture of boarding school culture while illuminating the Headfort's staff unique teaching philolsophies." — Scholastic Teacher Magazine
Citation
Main credits
Rane, David (film director)
Rane, David (film producer)
Ní Chianáin, Neasa (film director)
Leyden, John (on-screen participant)
Leyden, Amanda (on-screen participant)
Other credits
Cinematography, Neasa Ní Chianáin; editing, Mirjam Strugalla; music, Eryck Abecassis.