Liam, um jovem escritor, aceita ansiosamente um cargo de tutor na propriedade familiar de seu ídolo, o renomado autor J.M. Sinclair. Mas logo Liam percebe que está preso em uma teia de segre... Ler tudoLiam, um jovem escritor, aceita ansiosamente um cargo de tutor na propriedade familiar de seu ídolo, o renomado autor J.M. Sinclair. Mas logo Liam percebe que está preso em uma teia de segredos de família, ressentimento e retribuição.Liam, um jovem escritor, aceita ansiosamente um cargo de tutor na propriedade familiar de seu ídolo, o renomado autor J.M. Sinclair. Mas logo Liam percebe que está preso em uma teia de segredos de família, ressentimento e retribuição.
- Prêmios
- 3 indicações no total
Avaliações em destaque
Interesting build up with a botched ending
Is it a drama? Yes, kind of. Is it a thriller? It tries to be.
The first half sets everything up nicely and with plenty of dramatic tension, inner familial strife and forebodings about the water, sexual temptation and especially, plagiarism. So far so good.
Then we have the turning point about an hour in, and after that, all reason takes a holiday.
Are we to believe that Liam can remember the contents of a whole book?
Are we to believe that all this was planned from the start? Was the butler in on it?
I am sure that IT consultants everywhere were shouting at the screen about the 'deletion' scene.
Having said all this, it was well acted even though all the characters are quite reprehensible, and relatively well made with a decent first hour.
Intelligent and Intriguing
The movie also has a lot of ideas about writing and writers. As Richard E. Grant's character says, "Good writers borrow; Great writers steal." There's a lot to this movie, but I don't want to spoil anything in this review. It would make a great double-bill with the documentary UMBERTO ECO-A LIBRARY OF THE WORLD. If you like Harold Pinter and Tom Stoppard, you would probably enjoy this movie.
An engaging psychological mystery
J. M. Sinclair (Richard E. Grant) is an honored and successful novelist who has not released new work for five or more years. He is married to Hélène (Julie Delpy), who sells art. Their older son, Felix (Joseph Meurer), committed suicide two years earlier. The younger son, Bertie (Stephen McMillan), has gone through several tutors. Liam Somers (Daryl McCormack) is a graduate student who has extensively studied Sinclair's literary work and worked on his own first novel for several years.
Liam soon discovers the Sinclair family estate holds a lot of eccentricity and tension within its walls. He is periodically invited to join the family the dinner and develops a decent relationship with Bertie. Hélène seems protective of both J. M. and Bertie, but with an aloof edge. Any mention of Felix is forbidden, and the nearby pond where Felix died is off-limits. Liam's bedroom window allows him to observe much, and J. M. soon requires Liam's computer skills as he tries to complete his new novel. Liam's photographic memory also comes in handy.
Suddenly, everything goes off the rails as we learn more about Felix's death and the reasons for Sinclair's writer's block.
I found "The Lesson" an engaging mystery. Grant is a great arrogant novelist, and Delpy is a delicious conniving matriarch. McCormack is also convincing. The plot unfolded nicely until the very end when I thought it took an unrealistic turn. Nonetheless, I liked "The Lesson." The pacing and cinematography were good.
Had potential but didn't live up to it
The film has a good cast and some decent dialogue and the story has 'potential' (for lack of a better term). It's just that everything feels a little half-baked. It never commits to anything. It isn't willing to pull the trigger and dare to be something great and memorable. The film reminded me a lot of 'Saltburn' (also starring Richard E. Grant in the father role funny enough), only a light version of that movie.
I really wanted to like this movie more. And I should be clear that I didn't dislike the movie by any means, I just felt that it could've been more than it ultimately was. 6/10.
Not a thriller, but an enjoyable mystery drama
The setting is absolutely beautiful: a big manor by a lake, surrounded by greenery. Calm but eerie atmosphere. Acting is top notch, everyone is great, they really managed to get a great cast. The writing is smart, with lots of foreshadowing, symbolism, and literary references and devices that fit the movie's theme.
That said, I wouldn't give it a perfect score. The slow pacing is not for me, and a few character decisions felt off or hard to believe. It's not a movie I'd probably rewatch, but I was definitely intrigued the whole time and impressed by the actors' performances.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesJ M Sinclair's oft repeated remark that great writers steal derives from a statement generally attributed to T.S. Eliot that "Good writers borrow, great writers steal."
- Erros de gravaçãoLiam rips up the manuscript of his novel and throws the pages in the lake, where they float on the surface. In the next scene at the lake, there are no traces of the pages on the water's surface. Given the number of pages it's likely that at least some of the manuscript would still be floating in the water.
- Citações
J.M. Sinclair: I know writers who obsess, "how do I say something original?" "Am I saying something unique?" I'm sorry, there are no new ideas. Most writers are reconciled to the fact - and, if they're not, they pretty soon will be.
- ConexõesFeatures Meu Amor, Minha Ruína (1956)
Principais escolhas
- How long is The Lesson?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Lesson
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 310.746
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 166.601
- 9 de jul. de 2023
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 545.619
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 43 min(103 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1






