![]() On the other hand, the movie is unexpectedly affecting when it suggests a tragic “explanation” for Rafe’s misbehavior, then springs a mildly jolting third-act reveal. ![]() Middle School hits most of the predictable plot points and includes many of the archetypal characters common to this sort of youth-skewing entertainment, including the helpful brainy girl (Isabela Mona) and the hectoring bully (Jacob Hopkins). Teller, the only sympathetic teacher at Hills Village Middle School.) Still, it’s mildly distressing to consider how this character might come across to any young viewer coping with an abusive step-parent in real life. (A conspicuous exception to that generalization: Adam Pally as the casually hip Mr. Riggle plays his role with the same degree of amusingly cartoonish exaggeration evinced by most other actors cast as authoritarian figures in Middle School. ![]() Meanwhile, back on the home front, Rafe and Georgia (Alexa Nisenson), his precocious younger sister, must cope with a different sort of threat: Bear (Rob Riggle), their mother’s boorish boob of a boyfriend, who’s a childish bully when mom isn’t around - and quite willing to ship Rafe off to military school. More important, they worry whether other students will be infused with a spirit of revolution, and fail to do well on standardized tests that indicate the academic status of a school (and, more important, significantly enhance a principal’s career). So he summarily destroys Rafe’s magnum opus.Īs the guerilla campaign escalates from papering hallways with Post-It notes to transforming a trophy case into an aquarium, Principal Rafe and his second-in-command, vice-principal Ida Stricker (Retta), are increasing outraged by what they see as a subversive crusade for nonconformity. Unfortunately, Principal Dwight confiscates Rafe’s sketchbook and, even more unfortunately, fails to see the humor in Rafe’s mocking sketch of him. Rafe would prefer to lie low, make no waves, and channel his rebellious spirit into drawing sci-fi figures, comic-book characters, and satirical caricatures in his sketchbook. Rafe Khatchadorian ( Griffin Gluck), the protagonist of the piece, is a semi-introverted but fancifully imaginative youngster who, for reasons left teasingly unclear, already has been kicked out of two schools before his single mom (Lauren Graham) enrolls him at Hills Village Middle School, an institution operated as a personal fiefdom by the smugly dictatorial Principal Dwight (Andy Daly). But Middle School also may resonate with older viewers who most certainly do remember adolescent angst. ![]() To be sure, every generation is entitled to its own revenge fantasy, and this particular wishdream - inspired by the series-spawning novel by James Patterson and Chris Tebbets - is aimed primarily at viewers who might not yet have a firm grasp on puberty. So it’s entirely possible that even the folks who made Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life will be pleasantly surprised by the cross-generational appeal of their spirited comedy about a sixth-grader’s antiauthoritarian campaign of rule-breaking mischief. Griffin Gluck in ‘Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life’ (Lionsgate/CBS Films)Īs Francois Truffaut sagely noted, adolescence leaves pleasant memories only for adults who cannot remember.
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