Just comparing and contrastic different school experiences. (Please state your approximate location)

For me (Went to school in USA):

  • Frozen
  • Shrek
  • Tangled
  • The Pianist (it was a history class)
  • All the President’s Men (jounalism class in highschool)
  • The Wizard of Oz? (I think)
  • Idk the name, it was some “day of the dead” animated Spanish/Mexican kids movie about some “land of the remembered” and "land of the forgotten. (Just googled it aparantly its called “The Book of Life”) (Shown in like every Spanish class ever)
  • There was some movie about I think it was a hispanic singer, I think it was Selena. (Shown in a Spanish class)
  • The Maze Runner
  • The Giver (watched after the class was supposed to read the book The Giver, I kinda just skimmed it tho)
  • Memento (only watched part of it because I was depressed and I missed a session of class)
  • Dispicable Me
  • The Incredibles
  • Monster Inc
  • Toy Story
  • Some animated fish story (Finding Nemo I think?)
  • The Rat Chef In Hat Story

That about all I can remember.

I never liked watching them, being forced to watch a movie against your will immediately ruins whatever it is.

  • klemptor@startrek.website
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    56 minutes ago
    • For some reason we watched Beauty and the Beast in junior high
    • In my grade 9 (or maybe 10, can’t remember) Social Studies class we watched Not Without My Daughter
    • At the end of the school year in grade 10 we had those few extra days with no curriculum, and we watched Se7en (no idea how this was allowed)
    • In grade 10 we saw Romeo + Juliet (I think it had just come out on VHS and we’d just finished reading the play in English class)
    • Cool Hand Luke sometime in grade 9 or 10, don’t remember why
    • Grade 11 we saw both The Great Gatsby and Othello in English class

    I’m sure I’m missing some but these are the ones that stick out to me

    • DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      27 minutes ago

      The Great Gatsby

      Lol they showed the movie that has Leonardo Dicaprio in it, the story was so fucking boring that my brain just deleted it, its not even worth taking up brain space.

  • Drusas@fedia.io
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    3 hours ago

    I saw Blazing Saddles in a linguistic anthropology class in undergrad. That was pretty great.

    I also had an upper level Japanese class where the entire semester was based around watching and discussing Ikiru, which became an immediate favorite movie despite it being so much work to learn to watch it in Japanese.

  • JayJLeas@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I went to a Christian school in Australia. We watched:

    • The Mask
    • Rabbit-Proof Fence
    • One Night the Moon
    • Cool Runnings

    I don’t remember any others but there’s probably more.

  • Zonetrooper@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    A lot. Some of them were genuinely great. Some were way less so.

    • To Kill a Mockingbird: Earns every bit of reputation it has. Should be shown twice.

    • Teacher’s Pet: They showed this as a reward. I despised it. Seriously, it sticks in my head

    • The outsiders: “Okay, I guess.” I remember feeling it was a decent bit of storytelling, but I was too detached from the themes and era to care. Honestly, it was probably too old for kids to identify with.

    • When the Levees Broke: In retrospect, one of Lee’s weaker works. Nonetheless, it made a hell of an impact on us. We’d mostly seen helicopter’s-eye views of New Orleans. Getting down in with the people was a whole different view.

    • Tuesdays with Morrie: Apparently it’s popular, but we all hated it. Felt it was sentimental slop.

    • Brighton Beach Memoirs: Honestly don’t remember much. We mostly cared that, at the end, they actually showed the nude photo the lead character received. As kids, that was mind-blowing.

  • EnsignWashout@startrek.website
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    7 hours ago

    A college class introduced me to “The Birth of a Nation” aka The Clansman: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan

    Did you enjoy it?

    Fuck no. It is a deeply messed up racist pile of shit.

    It certainly opened my eyes to it’s place in history.

    Since the film itself is best left to the trash heap of forgotten awfulness, here’s two points from Wikipedia that feel worth remembering:

    • “the most reprehensibly racist film in Hollywood history”
    • was the first motion picture to be screened inside the White House (for President Woodrow Wilson)
  • nicerdicer@feddit.org
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    7 hours ago

    I went to school in Germany. Over the years we watched as a class

    • Mr. Bean (English lesson)
    • Schlaflos in Seattle / Sleepless in Seatte (as wished by the girls in class - English lesson)
    • Und täglich grüßt das Murmeltier / Groundhog Day (English lesson)
    • Das Phantom der Oper / The Phantom Of The Opera (Music lesson)
    • 1984 (Politics lesson)
    • Animal Farm (Politics lesson)
    • Es war einmal das Leben / Once Upon a Time… Life / Original title: Il était une fois… la vie (Biology lesson)
    • Apollo 13 (during the bus ride on a class trip)
    • A Christmas Carol (at the last day of school before winter/ Christmas holidays)

    Sometimes, I think it was in 6th grade, we had lesson in a room that was permanently equipped with a TV and VCR (as opposed to these portable TV carts a teacher had to roll into the room). When we behaved well (and we did!), we were allowed to watch MTV for the last remaining 10 - 15 minutes before lesson was dismissed.

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Several in French class. Jean des Florettes and its sequel are the ones I remember the most.

  • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    One of my teachers would always play Mr Bean videos the day after a big test. I thoroughly enjoyed the videos and probably wouldn’t have taken the time to watch them myself (maybe as an adult but not as a teen).

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    I took a history of film class in college and highly recommend it.

    We went through classics from Citizen Kane to Do The Right Thing, and the discussion beforehand of the symbolism and camera techniques really helped me understand WHY they were good. I don’t think I would have enjoyed most of them otherwise.

    • QuarterSwede@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Did similar in university. Loved the class. My favorites from that class and I didn’t even know they existed beforehand were Nueve Reinas (Nine Queens), there are so many reasons why that movie is a masterpiece, and Cinema Paradiso, which was a hugely impactful movie for me.

  • MisterCurtis@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    In the mid 90s I don’t think I would have ever watched Lorenzo’s Oil on my own. It’s a drama about parents trying to find a cure for their kid’s disease. A disease so rare there is no one researching it. Oh and it’s directed by George Miller, director of the Mad Max movies.

    Also the 60s adaptation of Flowers for Algernon “Charly” was wild to see as a kid. It’s very much a 60s film. Still the only adaptation I’ve seen. Only ever saw it the once. But I recall the teacher standing next to the TV with a sheet of paper to cover the screen for a couple scenes … I’m now incredibly curious what was in those scenes.

    • DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      8 hours ago

      Oh yea now that you mentioned it, I think I watched that in school too.

      Didn’t like the book, movie was… um… I rather watch a star wars sequel movie than that