Up the Down Staircase
Up the Down Staircase
NR | 28 June 1967 (USA)
Up the Down Staircase Trailers

Sylvia, a novice schoolteacher, is hired to teach English in a high school, but she’s met with an apathetic faculty, a delinquent student body and an administration that drowns its staff in paperwork. The following days go from bad to worse as Sylvia struggles to reach her most troubled students.

Reviews
Matcollis This Movie Can Only Be Described With One Word.
SeeQuant Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction
Tyreece Hulme One of the best movies of the year! Incredible from the beginning to the end.
Billy Ollie Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
bugsmoran29 I have been teaching since 1989, and I enjoy watching films based upon educators. 'Up the Down Staircase" is one of the better movies dealing with the theme of the idealistic teacher beginning their career in an inner city high school. Sandy Dennis' character study picks up where Glen Ford's left off with "A Blackboard Jungle." It interesting to see how things had stayed so much the same between 1955 and 1967 in New York City. I wonder if things have pretty much stayed the same these past 50 years. I saw this movie at the theater back in 1967 when it first came out. One thing I noticed when I watched this film in 2016 was the band playing at the high school dance was playing a Fifties style music that probably was pretty passes by 1967. The Beatles had been out for 3 or 4 years and the music would have been more modern. The kids are all wearing sport coats, ties and dresses at the dance was something that you wouldn't see nowadays.
Maddyclassicfilms Up The Down Staircase is directed by Robert Mulligan, has a screenplay by Tad Mosel, is based on the novel by Bel Kaufman and stars Sandy Dennis and Patrick Bedford.Sylvia Barrett(Sandy Dennis) is an enthusiastic and idealistic young teacher who starts a job as English teacher at a New York High school. The majority of the students don't want to be in school and she has to deal with bad behaviour, learn the rules of the school and try not to let the pressure of the job get to her.Dennis is superb in the lead role, you really feel for her as she tries to reach her students and get them engaged in lessons. Her co star Patrick Bedford steals the film from her though. Bedford plays Paul Barringer, another teacher at the school who is just going through the motions and has long since given up trying to be inspirational. When a young student writes him a love letter he callously corrects the grammar in it in front of her, instead of talking to her about it's content. His inability not to talk to her about her feelings has tragic consequences.Barringer's rant in Barrett's class later in the film is a highlight.A great film about how difficult it can be to be a teacher. Getting students interested in subjects and indeed in learning in general is not always easy and sometimes fails to happen at all, but many teachers will keep on trying and this film shows that.
Ed Uyeshima Fresh from her acclaimed portrayal of the young professor's frail alcoholic wife in Mike Nichols' classic adaptation of Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?", Sandy Dennis starred in this forgotten 1967 drama that covers familiar territory in the movies, the idealistic high school teacher who must get through to a classroom full of unruly inner-city teens. Variations of the same storyline can be seen in a variety of films like "Stand and Deliver", "Dangerous Minds", the recent "Freedom Writers", and another 1967 film, "To Sir, With Love" with Sidney Poitier. Resuscitated from obscurity in a 2007 DVD release, this one is surprisingly free of the predictable clichés that mar most of the films of this genre. Produced by Alan J. Pakula and directed by Robert Mulligan, the same team that made two of my favorites from the 1960's, "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Love with the Proper Stranger", this film forges its own identity as a positive yet realistic view of the common problems faced by an urban high school overrun with students, short on funds and run by administrators and teachers more interested in maintaining civility in the classrooms than providing an actual education.Into the chaos of Calvin Coolidge High School walks Sylvia Barrett, a young, inexperienced teacher intent on making a difference through the naïve methods she developed from her insular, college-trained perspective. You can figure out how her methods are initially greeted and how indifferent her fellow teachers have become to such optimism. However, she perseveres with a blend of patience and subtle defiance, and there is a wonderfully liberated scene where her students become enraptured by the opening paragraphs of Dickens' "A Tale of Two Cities". As Miss Barrett gets to know her students and fellow teachers, so do we, and her personal journey leads to revelations that lend emotional resonance to the viewer thanks to Tad Mosel's incisive, unsentimental screenplay (based on Bel Kaufman's 1965 best-seller). Interestingly, we never see her life outside of school, which makes the drama within the school environs all the more compelling.Known for her idiosyncratic style and perpetually nervous manner, Dennis uses her unique style to strong effect resulting in a remarkably empathetic performance. Familiar faces dot the supporting cast – Eileen Heckart as a cheery teacher masking an inappropriate crush on a student, Jean Stapleton as a harried administrator, Roy Poole as the tough-minded principal, Sorrell Booke as the poker-faced superintendent, Ruth White as a veteran teacher who teaches Sylvia how to survive the urban jungle, and Florence Stanley as an unctuous, absurdly organized counselor. Looking like a cross between Sal Mineo and John Stamos, Jeff Howard, who later played bit parts in Hal Hartley's films, cannily handles the role of a delinquent with potential, though Patrick Bedford somewhat overdoes his role as a lecherous teacher who dismisses a shy schoolgirl's romantic advances. My only reservation is that the film runs a bit long at 124 minutes. The DVD's only significant extra is the original theatrical trailer.
edwagreen Sandy Dennis was realistic as the young idealistic teacher trying to cope in a traditional urban setting in "Up the Down Staircase," based on Bel Kaufman's best seller.You really have to be a teacher or at least know one to have any idea of what is going on in our public schools.Jean Stapleton's Sadie Finch was perfect. As the school secretary, she thought she ran the place. She literally did being constantly on the intercom stating to ignore the continuously ringing fire alarms.To this very day, sadly, there is no solution to the problems of urban education. We try this program, this initiative, this idea-but nothing really works, when you have groups of students dedicated to the belief that nobody learns when they're around in school. Having taught in the NYC school system for 32 years before my retirement, I have to say that the film offers an extremely realistic view of what is occurring. We have an assistant principal here who treats the teachers in the same way that the students are to be treated. He lashes out at them. Besides being highly unprofessional, how do these supervisors expect a teacher to command respect when they are spoken down to in front of students? My first principal of cherished memory often said that a teacher has succeeded if they can reach at least 5 pupils in the class. In that context, this film certainly succeeds. Of course, it's unrealistic when we see this class of mostly losers catch on to Miss Barrett's methods so quickly. We see a principal who seems to go through the motions when addressing a student assembly. Yet, Sorrell Booke, is very touching in that role when he explains to Sylvia Barrett (the late Sandy Dennis) that she is a good teacher and that there are better schools. The librarian and guidance counselor brought back memories to me. Frances Sternhagen, as the former, showed how uninvolved many school librarians are in the education process. The fact is that they are exempt from teaching classes and are in a world of their own. Ditto for guidance counselors who treat to their small offices with their files and psychological jargon. Florence Stanley was so appealing in that latter role. Patrick Bedford epitomized the cool teacher who was guilty of a serious infraction. When you're free period 1, you still belong in the building as anything can happen as depicted. In New York City, our current school officials should see this excellent, endearing film.