Waiting for Superman
Can documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim do for education what he did for global warming? The director of “An Inconvenient Truth” unveiled “Waiting for Superman” at Sundance on Friday, and the documentary was picked up by Paramount Vantage. That means it will be seen on more screens than other earnest, but little known education docs like “Children Left Behind.” Will the message get out to the popcorn crowd that the richest nation in the world is systematically failing its children, year after year after year?
I haven’t seen it (stuck here in the blue purple state of Massachusetts), but the word out of Sundance looks positive. Variety describes it as “”Exhilarating, heartbreaking and righteous,” continuing,
“Waiting for Superman” is also a kind of high-minded thriller: Can the American education system be cured? Can it be made globally competitive? Can it, at least, be made educational?
I’m not so sure about the thriller part — kinda hard to have a thriller without a resolution — but the film is sure to draw attention to our struggling schools. The doc follows several families who are trying to work their way through the system; the title comes from a girl’s dream that someone will magically appear to rescue her.
Talking heads include college dropout and education philanthropist Bill Gates, the visionary Geoffrey Canada of the Harlem Children’s Zone, and controversial DC school chancellor Michelle Rhee. From what I’ve read, the documentary is particularly tough on teacher unions and gonzo on charter schools, both of which are hot points of contention in any discussion of what’s failing education.