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High School

Screening on Film
Directed by Frederick Wiseman.
US, 1968, 16mm, black & white, 75 min.
Print source: Zipporah Films

From the chaos and controversy of Titicut Follies, Wiseman moved on to the comparatively placid hallways of public high school for his second film. Resuming the more overtly critical commentary of his early work, Wiseman weaves together fragmented sequences, visual puns, unsympathetic close-ups, and witty cuts to produce an ultimately scathing evaluation of North East High School in Philadelphia, considered one of the top schools in the city at the time. Droning an incessant message of control, repression and conformity to a generally listless student body, teachers and administrators prowl the hallways, ridicule independent thought, dictate, manipulate, confuse and simply bore the teenagers into submitting to a generic existence. By the film's end, the familiar institutional languor and disciplinary monotone of public schools offers a shockingly smug confirmation of its own moribund purpose. – BG

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