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Waiting for 'Superman'

Waiting for 'Superman'

2010
Documentary
1h 51m
Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education "statistics" have names: Anthony, Francisco, Bianca, Daisy, and Emily, whose stories make up the engrossing foundation of WAITING FOR SUPERMAN. As he follows a handful of promising kids through a system that inhibits, rather than encourages, academic growth, Guggenheim undertakes an exhaustive review of public education, surveying "drop-out factories" and "academic sinkholes," methodically dissecting the system and its seemingly intractable problems.
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Waiting for 'Superman'

2010
Documentary
1h 51m
Your probable score
Avg Percentile 56.09% from 378 total ratings

Ratings & Reviews

(378)
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Rated 04 Nov 2010
50
40th
Fairly entertaining, but the "yes we can" like ending credits was overwhelmingly nauseating - and made the rest of the film seem like a waste of time. Furthermore the constant knowledge that half of the kids in the film are going do die from a crack abuse was somewhat saddening. Great illustrations though!
Rated 31 Oct 2010
37
5th
The problems with public education are a lot more complex than the film suggests--i.e. the teacher's union are "kryptonite" while charter schools are "superman." And I fear it may lead to simplistic solutions that only make matters worse.
Rated 05 Oct 2010
92
92nd
Less a movie than a call-2-arms this packs an emotional wallop: a powerful argument 4 a complete overhaul in the teaching system (hopefully republicans can c past simply dismantling the teacher's unions & realize that teachers'll have 2 become the new lawyers (ambitious & driven workaholics who trade 60 hour work weeks for 6 figure salaries)) in order 4 real change 2 occur. The film crystallizes what works, as well as the cruel insanity of limiting real educations 2 a relative handful by lottery
Rated 21 Nov 2011
45
33rd
A documentary where some self proclaimed geniuses can't figure out for the life of them why a bunch of black and latino kids who are living in borderline poverty communities cannot possibly keep up with the educational system no matter how much they are encouraged. Hilarity ensues.
Rated 17 Oct 2010
85
81st
It's as unbiased as a doc on American education can get. It demonstrates that the liberal-leaning teachers' unions have become so big and corrupted that they resist any real reform in order to protect themselves. It also deconstructs the popular conservative fallacy that anyone in America can succeed provided that they try hard enough. I believe the charter school lotteries are primarily shown as a metaphor for how few of our children will succeed, in the hopes of igniting constructive debate.
Rated 06 Mar 2011
65
46th
Yes, the school system has some problems. Some major problems. Actually it is in such a shitty condition, that the 'we can do it' ending seems laughable. Go watch 'Inside Job' and you'll have an idea of why there isn't money enough to provide proper education.
Rated 22 Dec 2011
45
7th
As soon as one "expert" claimed that if ONLY we could fire 5% of teachers, our education system would be as good as Finland's, I began to suspect both the methods and motives of this documentary. An anti-union screed, pretending to care only about the welfare of children.
Rated 01 Jan 2013
18
51st
There is no hope.
Rated 06 Oct 2010
20
13th
Anti-union wolf in liberal sheep's clothing.
Rated 01 Nov 2010
75
41st
Raises a lot of broad concerns about the US education system, but is sorely lacking a defined thesis. Ultimately the film argues for the charter school system, but doesn't offer enough arguments nor answer enough opposing questions. The call-to-arms lines at the end addressing a need for "great people, high expectations and accountability," are so generic as to be laughable.
Rated 24 Mar 2011
45
36th
This is a 'There's a problem with schools, which we sort of don't really understand, but hey! Luckily we can do something if we, you know, do something' kind of documentary, and I'm a 'Okay, you guys go do something then, see ya!' kind of guy.
Rated 08 Oct 2010
95
97th
As a documentary, very good. As an advocacy piece, an amazing film.
Rated 03 Jul 2012
1
6th
Ignores both the systemic and pedagogical faults with American education in favour of a privatized solution (Which, shockingly [!] the film's financial backers themselves stand to profit from).
Rated 27 Apr 2011
92
92nd
Of the handful of recent documentaries on the American education system I have seen, this one is by far the most developed and balanced in terms of political and social bias. Though teachers unions receive much of the negative attention here, there is no one group that has been singled out, or pardoned, as the party responsible for low school performances. While some go straight for the heart with over-emotional pap and others come off too dry and numerical, this film finds a perfect medium.
Rated 04 Mar 2011
85
75th
THE GREATER GOOD IS NOT EMOTIONALLY SATISFYING. Giving this film a -15 because it crushed me.
Rated 19 Sep 2012
70
33rd
The American education system is certainly plagued with many problems, I can speak from experience. I had hoped that this documentary would delve deeper into the problems with teaching methods rather than just environmental conditions and bad teachers with everlasting tenure, but perhaps that's better suited to the book format where complex issues such as these can be adequately addressed. In any case, this documentary is definitely on the right path to making people question the system.
Rated 15 Nov 2011
70
48th
Watched it with my mom who happens to be a teacher. I guess this is somewhat controversial among teacher. I felt that it didn't go far enough into the problem(s). While it does an good job explaining some problems with the education system, it would take significantly more time, probably a couple days, to fully explain all the problems and reasonable solutions. So for what it's worth, it's a decent film.
Rated 06 Jun 2013
40
19th
http://gorgview.com/waiting-for-superman
Rated 18 Feb 2011
95
98th
This suggests a problem with our system that no one is willing to tackle
Rated 01 Apr 2012
40
37th
I feel like the documentary raised some decent points here and there{like how tenure is really stupid} but it also has a very narrow perception of the issue and even goes so far to claim outright bullshit like how students do better in better border school{they actually do worse}. The documentary is pretty clear on the agenda it wants to push, and the amount of emotional baggage thrown in to push it is pretty pathetic.
Rated 03 Oct 2010
80
68th
Why U.S. education sucks. Tries too hard to end on an upbeat note, but informative and generally winning. So *this* is why I had so many K-12 teachers that I'd like to shoot in the face
Rated 22 Jul 2011
60
57th
Good documentary with very skilled camera operators framing each shot. The biggest weakness is the voice of the narrator, which is irritating to say the least. Thankfully there is less voice-over in the second half of the film. The animated graphs are well done and elevate the production value of the film overall. Ultimately with such rich subject matter one walks away wishing the director had squeezed a bit more analytical depth into the 110 minute runtime.
Rated 29 Mar 2014
86
62nd
Probably oversimplifies its issues, but it is emotionally effective. Decent doc.
Rated 16 May 2011
81
72nd
Should have better explained what unholy powers the teachers' unions have over public schools, but otherwise very informative and enjoyable.
Rated 13 Nov 2010
88
68th
"Waiting for Superman," the new documentary by Davis Guggenheim, contends the American educational system is failing, which we have been told before. He dramatizes this failure in a painfully direct way, says what is wrong, says what is right.
Rated 12 Feb 2011
78
78th
Solid and informative. Manages to keep you interested both emotionally and pragmatically. Only get's overly political in a few spots.
Rated 06 Aug 2021
80
70th
2014.2.13/???????????????????????
Rated 27 Aug 2017
8
76th
Very informative.
Rated 13 Feb 2011
75
69th
Powerful, and a great insight to the school system. I was a little disappointed with the lack of any clear solution the problems presented. The resolution doesn't have much of a punch. We're dragged through this depressing and failing mess of a national crisis, yet the film ends without any clear sign of hope or answer.
Rated 23 Apr 2011
45
28th
Well-intentioned and likeable for sure, but so politically correct it mostly leaves an impression of tacky self-righteousness.
Rated 22 Oct 2012
63
26th
It's a good and instructive documentary but I had enough of "We are America, we were the greatest nation once upon a time and now we suck" attitude in every doc I see about US.
Rated 23 Jun 2012
2
21st
Guggenheim once again takes a very narrow and limited view of a subject and tackles it in the most boring way possible. He fails to consider that a lot of these kids come from broken homes and is actually the root of most of these problems. Throwing money at something almost never works (look at Africa). Wasn't as terrible as An Inconvenient Truth but still a huge waste of time.
Rated 01 Mar 2011
93
82nd
I actually really enjoyed this movie. It keeps you hoping and supporting for the people of the main roles.
Rated 28 Nov 2010
30
78th
"Guggenheim wants you to know that he has an education problem, and that you should too." - Matthew Connolly
Rated 15 Mar 2011
90
96th
A documentary about the future of our people -- our children. A must see if you think they are important. It also shows how corrupted big organizations always get. In this case, the teachers' union. So much money is spend on teaching but so little is thaught, and the power of the union prevails.
Rated 15 Mar 2011
60
79th
A well paced, well reasoned, documentary about the breakdown in America's public school system. Despite what some critics say, there is no anti union agenda here and any negative portrayal of the teacher's union comes from their own actions and resistance to every effort at reform. It should also be mentioned that the US is at the top of the world rankings in spending per student. This isn't an issue of budget but of accountability.
Rated 03 Jun 2011
8
76th
"It's all about the adults". This phrase says it all.
Rated 17 Dec 2012
30
11th
A poor documentary that brings up many more questions than it answers. As interesting as the subject matter could be, this is a dull, unfocused and slightly confusing waste of time. By choosing the (irrelevant, in the big scheme of things) 'school lottery' outcomes as the climax Guggenheim admits as much, conceding he's going nowhere and attempting a cheap emotive punch to go out on. The decision to completely dismiss outside influences on the kids is criminal too.
Rated 14 Aug 2011
80
77th
That lottery at the end that shits on families, mmmhmm.
Rated 23 Sep 2011
70
46th
Simplistic answers to a complicated problem.

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