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poster of Teaching Mrs. Tingle
Rating: 5.5/10 by 327 users

Teaching Mrs. Tingle (1999)

A bright high-school senior has her impending status as valedictorian jeopardized when her bitter history teacher, Mrs. Tingle, gives her a poor grade on a project. When an attempt to get ahead in Mrs. Tingle's class goes awry, mayhem ensues and friendships, loyalties and trust are tested by the teacher's intricate mind-games.

Directing:
  • Kevin Williamson
  • Ronit Ravich-Boss
  • Steve M. Davison
Writing:
  • Kevin Williamson
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Aug 11, 1999

Rating: 5.5/10 by 327 users

Alternative Title:
Rettet Mrs. Tingle! - DE
Wo ist Mrs. Tingle? - DE
Killing Mrs. Tingle - US

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 36 minutes
Budget: $13,000,000
Revenue: $8,946,237

Plot Keyword: pornography, scholarship, parent child relationship, class, bed, graduation, final exam, exam, bastille, teen movie, tears, gym, teenage sexuality, knocked out, valedictorian, history class, history teacher, letter opener, school bus

Helen Mirren
Mrs. Tingle
Katie Holmes
Leigh Ann Watson
Barry Watson
Luke Churner
Marisa Coughlan
Jo Lynn Jordan
Michael McKean
Principal Potter
Jeffrey Tambor
Coach Wenchell
Liz Stauber
Trudie Tucker
Lesley Ann Warren
Faye Watson (uncredited)
Harvey Silver
Roger (uncredited)
Alan Heitz
Student (uncredited)
Brian Klugman
Student (uncredited)
Cherie Johnson
Student (uncredited)
Marissa Jaret Winokur
Student (uncredited)

John Chard

Caught between its aims? Three students get more than they bargained for when a theft of a test results paper leads to a deadly battle of wills with their kidnapped teacher, Mrs. Tingle. It seems to me that director and writer, Kevin Wiliamson, got confused as to which direction the film should go in. At times it's jaunty when the scene appears to call for menace, and at others just plain boring if the scene was meant to be actually funny (in that sarcastic, almost satirical way). The film could have worked at either being a comedy or a thriller, but the fusion of the two just doesn't work, and this failing has to fall at Williamson's door, it's as if Scream was all a fluke after all? The cast struggle with the meanderingly dull screenplay, only the stoic (and sexy) Helen Mirren salvaging any sort of dignity by realising early on that the core of the film calls for deft nastiness instead of outright villainy. Poor and practically unwatchable these days. 2/10


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