

The School Teacher
She gave him private lessons.
Synopsis
A rich Sicilian, Fefè Mottola, decides to call a wealthy girl graduate: Giovanna, who is about to become a teacher, because his son needs repetitions. The boy, named Franco, is shocked by the physical beauty of the teacher, and so to restrain himself decides to pose as gay. But the deception does not last long, because the sexual impulses of Alfredo explode.
Main Cast
User Reviews
Peyman
L’insegnante is a film that is based more on the common formulas of Italian erotic comedy of the 70s than on narrative or characterization: a combination of light situations, a series of misunderstandings and a focus on the physical attractiveness of the main character. In terms of structure, the film has a simple, almost pretextual plot: a spoiled and aimless teenager in an aristocratic environment that does not care about studies and discipline is thrown into a series of uncontrolled situations by the arrival of a young and attractive tutor. But this storyline is not designed to provide suspense or character development, nor is it intended to reach a meaningful conclusion; it is more a platform for setting up humorous scenes and exaggerated situations. On the performance level, the film is completely dependent on the charisma of Edwige Fenech. The camera rests on her presence again and again, and much of the film’s charm comes from this presence, not from the dialogue or the script. The other characters are practically secondary, used more to advance the situation than to have an independent identity. From a directorial perspective, the film is understandable within the framework of the commercial cinema of its time: fast pace, simple editing, and a focus on short, isolated scenes. But this episodic structure makes the narrative coherence not very strong, and the film seems more like a series of comedy sketches than a complete story. Ultimately, L’insegnante is a work of no great artistic or narrative value, and can be considered more as a product of a specific period of Italian popular cinema; a period in which superficial charms replaced deep narrative elaboration. The result is a film that is light, predictable, and completely dependent on predetermined formulas—which, if we do not expect serious things from the genre, remains just a simple entertainment to watch



















