Film review: Won't Back Down (PG)

 

Anthony Quinn
Thursday 24 January 2013 12:00 EST
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Parent dud: Viola Davis and Maggie Gyllenhaal in 'Won't Back Down'
Parent dud: Viola Davis and Maggie Gyllenhaal in 'Won't Back Down' (Kerry Hayes/Walden Media)

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The US education system comes under fire in this earnest and manipulative drama that pits the ordinary guy – or rather gals – against the bosses, in this case the unions. Maggie Gyllenhaal plays hard-pressed single mum Jamie, who wants to spring her dyslexic daughter from the classroom of an incompetent time-server.

Having failed to clinch her a place at the local charter school – a heartbreaking public lottery – Jamie then asks decent, hard-working teacher Nona (Viola Davis) to help transform their failing inner-city school. A long slog of doorstepping, leafleting and rallying lies ahead, in the course of which you may want to fling a piece of chalk or two at the screen.

Everything about it feels formulaic and perfunctory, including our crusaders' personal lives – Jamie falls for a guitar-playing hunk (Oscar Isaac), Nona falls out with her husband (Lance Reddick) – while a piety-throwing contest flares up between the union firebrands and the parents who want to save their kids from a broken system.

Davis is tremendous as the teacher at the end of her tether, but she's wasted good acting on this.

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