Education
Peter Sarsgaard Actor , Carey Mulligan Actor , Alfred Molina Actor , Rosamund Pike Actor , Dominic Cooper Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Sexual Situations,Smoking
Choose a format:
-
Overview
-
Format Details
-
Edtitorial Reviews
-
Cast & Production Credits
Education
Theatrical Release Date: 2009 (USA) / 2009 (USA - Limited) / 2009 10 09 (USA - Limited)
UPC: 043396331761
Studio: Sony Pictures
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Sexual Situations, Smoking]
Summary: A suburban London teen finds her traditional education replaced by something slightly more sinister when an older, more worldly suitor sweeps her off of her feet while placing her future in jeopardy. London, 1961: 16-year-old Jenny (Carey Mulligan) is smart, attractive, and eager to start her adult life. She's grown tired of the familiar adolescent routine, so when urbane newcomer David (Peter Sarsgaard) appears in town, Jenny senses a rare opportunity to shake things up a bit. Quickly falling under David's spell, the impressionable Jenny begins accompanying her newfound beau to classical concerts, art auctions, crowded pubs, and dinners that stretch into the small hours of the night. But Jenny is brighter than most kids her age, and her parents always dreamt of getting their exceptional daughter into Oxford. These days it seems like she's headed in a different direction -- will David ultimately be her undoing, or the person who helps her finally realize her true potential? ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Drama
Awards: Film Presented – Sundance Film Festival Film Presented – London Film Festival Film Presented – Toronto International Film Festival Film Presented – Chicago International Film Festival Best Foreign Film – Independent Spirit Awards Best Picture – National Board of Review Best Actress – National Board of Review Best Actress – Washington D.C. Film Critics Association Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Producer of the Year – Producers Guild of America Most Promising Performer – Chicago Film Critics Association Best Actress – Toronto Film Critics Association Producer of the Year – Producers Guild of America Best Actress – Chicago Film Critics Association Best Actress – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Actress – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Adapted Screenplay – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Picture – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Picture – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Director – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Picture – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best British Film – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Actress – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Supporting Actor – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Costume Design – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Adapted Screenplay – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Makeup and Hair – British Academy of Film and Television Arts
Features:
Deleted Scenes
Commentary with Director Lone Scherfig and Actor Carey Mulligan and Peter Sarsgaard
The Making of An Education
Walking the Red Carpet
Education
Format: Blu-ray
Release Date: 03/30/2010
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope
Audio: DHMA null, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo
Runtime: 100 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English
Subtitles: English,French
Perry Seibert
Coming-of-age films usually center on young men losing their virginity, and finding out the world is a rough and difficult place that forces them to discover who they really are in order to make their place in it. An Education is an excellent coming-of-age tale, and by having a young woman at its center it stands out from this heavily populated genre. It's London in 1961, and intelligent, attractive, ambitious, 16-year-old Jenny (Carey Mulligan) studies hard hoping to earn a scholarship to Oxford. Pushed by her penny-pinching father, Jack (Alfred Molina), Jenny studies her Latin, but she's so eager to escape her current circumstances that she needs very little prodding. However, when she meets David (Peter Sarsgaard), a charming, sophisticated, Jewish thirtysomething, his worldliness attracts her. Soon she lets her studies slide, and goes on weekend trips with her new guy, his friend Danny (Dominic Cooper), and Danny's dim girlfriend, Helen (Rosamund Pike). As Jenny learns the shady ways in which David maintains the income that allows him to lead such a free-wheeling life, his justifications and rationalizations simply draw her deeper into him. Soon Jenny must decide between the future she planned, and the man she loves. Working from a superb script by novelist Nick Hornby, director Lone Scherfig does a flawless job of putting us in pre-Beatles Britain, using costumes, music, and art direction to transport us to a time and a place where it's apparent that seismic social changes are just around the corner. She accomplishes this subtly, without ever taking our attention away from her superior cast, headed by Carey Mulligan. Although she's in her twenties, Mulligan is a more than passable teenager, especially one who is almost too smart for her own good. Jenny's sense of superiority -- her insistence that she knows everything -- could make her alienating, but Mulligan makes Jenny such a unique presence that you fall in love with her. Hornby gives Jenny such articulate and well-reasoned dialogue that you understand why she's making such horrible, life-altering choices; she's so persuasive you might not even believe they are bad choices. Mulligan communicates Jenny's self-assuredness and her excitement at discovering a world so much richer than her day-to-day existence with such realism that our fear for her becomes palpable. As much as Mulligan dominates the movie, she's hardly the only actor who shines. Molina takes a role that could easily be a stereotype -- the overbearing dad -- and makes him specific enough to be a sympathetic individual rather than a clich?. Sarsgaard brings a natural likability, as well as his gift for unconventional line readings, to David, seducing us as well as Jenny even while warning sirens sound in our heads. As Helen, Rosamund Pike acts as Jenny's polar opposite -- a dumb girl surviving on nothing more than her looks and surface charm -- and if the saying is true that playing dumb requires great smarts, then Pike is one of the most intelligent actresses out there. And last, but far from least, Olivia Williams never hits a wrong note as Miss Stubbs, a sympathetic teacher. She's the only character who can simultaneously see how much Jenny stands to lose, and understand that her heartfelt attempts to get through to the stubborn teen are agonizing exercises in futility. It's Williams who delivers the most heart-breaking performance in the whole movie. With a cast this uniformly strong, and a script so elegantly appealing, it's little wonder that An Education elicits such a warm feeling. It's full of people we like, and people we recognize -- people we want to see succeed, and people who surprise us even after we think we understand everything about them. It's a movie full of life. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Finola Dwyer
Producer
David M. Thompson
Executive Producer
James D. Stern
Executive Producer
Nick Hornby
Executive Producer
Nick Hornby
Screenwriter
Amanda Posey
Producer
Wendy Japhet
Executive Producer
Paul Englishby
Composer (Music Score)
Lone Scherfig
Director
Douglas E. Hansen
Executive Producer
Jamie Laurenson
Executive Producer
Peter Sarsgaard
Actor
Carey Mulligan
Actor
Alfred Molina
Actor
Rosamund Pike
Actor
Dominic Cooper
Actor
Emma Thompson
Actor
Olivia Williams
Actor
Sally Hawkins
Actor
Cara Seymour
Actor
Matthew Beard
Actor
William Melling
Actor
Connor Catchpole
Actor
Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
Actor
Ellie Kendrick
Actor
Nick Sampson
Actor
Kate Duchene
Actor
Bel Parker
Actor
Luis Soto
Actor
Olenka Wrzesniewski
Actor
Bryony Wadsworth
Actor
Ashley Taylor-Rhys
Actor
James Norton
Actor
Beth Rowley
Actor
Ben Castle
Actor
Mark Edwards
Actor
Tom Rees-Roberts
Actor
Arnie Somogyi
Actor
Paul Wilkinson
Actor
Phil Wilkinson
Actor
Country: UK

