THE EMPEROR'S CLUB
Having collaborated on A Midsummer Night's Dream back in 1999, director
Michael Hoffman and actor Kevin Kline reunite for this schmaltz (based on Ethan
Canin's short story "The Palace Thief") about a dutiful educator confronted
with an obstinate youth. Its arc is reminiscent of Dead Poets Society,
with Kline playing Mr. Hundert, the compassionate but perfectionist instructor
of "Western Civilization" at an all-boys school in 1972. His challenge,
Sedgewick Bell (Emile Hirsch), is a troublemaking thorn in the side of the
administration. Sedgewick also gets piss-poor grades, but he's on a long
disciplinary leash because his father is a power-thumping senator. In a
Rocky-like ploy, Hundert uses the big Julius Caesar contest, a
classical-studies form of Jeopardy with toga-clad contestants, to
connect with the peevish adolescent and help him turn the corner. There's an
effective, if contrived, device whereby the film jumps forward some 25 years to
reveal how several small misjudgments have had a drastic impact on the future.
But the ruling power behind The Emperor's Club is Kline, who
brings conviction and vitality to what would otherwise be stereotype. (120
minutes) At the Flagship and Showcase cinemas.
Issue Date: November 22 - 28, 2002
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