Dead Poet Society Movie Views
When I first saw Dead Poetm’s Society back in the late 80d′s, the experience was wasted on me. I was a huge Robin Williams fan and the kind of movie I gravitated to was not this, but comedic and the more explosive, gun-toting kind of movie. I remember walking away from this movie, having taken nothing from it. Shame on me, but I was young. Very young.
We focus on a few of the students more than the others but after being introduced to the Dead PoetP’s Society that existed in Keating2’s day, Neil starts the club up again as they meet in a cave to secretly explore their poetic creativity. Neilt’s father, Mr. Perry, is played by Kurtwood Smith (Whose career covers such shows as That 70a′s Show, Medium & FoxI’s 24.)
Every actor delivers wonderful roles. I was riveted to Robert Sean Leonard as I watched similar mannerisms that Ii’ve come to recognize from his Dr. Wilson role in House M.D.. I found it peculiar that in Dead Poets Society, has father wanted him to become a doctor. In House, he is a doctor.
Dead Poets Society (1989) By Jim Emerson Hopelessly riddled with paradoxes and contradictions, Peter Weir's Dead Poets Society is a numbingly conventional commercial formula picture that, incongruously, pretends to celebrate non-conformity. It's a film by the extraordinary Australian director Peter Weir (Picnic at Hanging Rock, The Last Wave, The Year of Living Dangerously, Witness, The Mosquito Coast, among others) that neatly trims its edges to safely and snugly into the Touchstone Pictures factory mold. The only thing surprising about this movie is that Weir has made something so bland and unadventurous.