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With only 12 percent of its pupils obtaining their baccalaureate, Jules Ferry High School is the worst school in France. The Inspector of Schools has already exhausted all the conventional means to raise standards at the school and he has no choice but to take the advice of his deputy. It is a case of having to fight fire with fire: the worst pupils must be taught by the worst teachers...
With only 12 percent of its pupils obtaining their baccalaureate, Jules Ferry High School is the worst school in France. The Inspector of Schools has already exhausted all the conventional means to raise standards at the school and he has no choice but to take the advice of his deputy. It is a case of having to fight fire with fire: the worst pupils must be taught by the worst teachers...
The film's central conflict revolves around improving a failing public school through unconventional teaching methods, focusing on individual agency and comedic situations rather than advocating for broader systemic change or promoting a distinct political ideology.
The movie features a visibly diverse cast, typical of an ensemble comedy, without explicitly recasting traditionally white roles. Its narrative focuses on comedic situations rather than offering critiques of traditional identities or centering explicit DEI themes.
The character of Amina, the math teacher, who was depicted as white in the original French comic book series "Les Profs," is portrayed by a Black actress in the 2013 film adaptation.
The film "Serial Teachers" does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. The plot focuses on a group of incompetent teachers and their students, with no explicit or implicit LGBTQ+ representation.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts a comic series, but characters like the sports and French teachers, who were male in the source material, are replaced by new, original female characters in the film rather than being gender-swapped versions of the comic's established characters.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources