The Emperor's Club

For the escort service, see Emperors Club VIP.
The Emperor's Club

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Michael Hoffman
Produced by Marc Abraham
Andrew S. Karsch
Michael O'Neill
Screenplay by Neil Tolkin
Based on The Palace Thief
by Ethan Canin
Starring Kevin Kline
Music by James Newton Howard
Cinematography Lajos Koltai
Edited by Harvey Rosenstick
Production
company
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release dates
  • September 9, 2002 (2002-09-09) (TIFF)
  • November 22, 2002 (2002-11-22)
Running time
109 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $12.5 million
Box office $16,318,449

The Emperor's Club is a 2002 American drama film directed by Michael Hoffman and starring Kevin Kline. Based on Ethan Canin's short story "The Palace Thief," the film follows a prep school teacher and his students at a fictional boys' prep school, St. Benedict's Academy, near Washington, D.C.

It was filmed at Emma Willard School in Troy, New York, although St. Benedict's Academy is said to be modeled after Phillips Exeter Academy, a preparatory school in Exeter, New Hampshire. Kline, discussing the film at his alma mater, St. Louis Priory School, said that he modeled his character after the Rev. Dom Timothy Horner, an English Benedictine monk and headmaster of Priory when Kline was enrolled there.

Plot

In 2001, William Hundert, a retired Classics teacher, is flown out to a luxurious resort in the Hamptons owned by one of his former students in order to be the guest of honor in an impromptu reunion. As he gets settled in he reflects on the turn of events in a flashback of his time working at Saint Benedict's Academy, a prestigious preparatory school. Twenty-eight years earlier, a younger Mr. Hundert is enthusiastic about the start of the school year. His class turns out to be a strict yet inspiring lesson for the freshmen. They include laid-back Louis Masoudi, introverted Martin Blythe, and studious Deepak Mehta. Hundert inspires his students to study hard in order to become one of the three contestants for The Emperor's Club and be crowned "Mr. Julius Caesar", an academic competition between top three students of his class regarding the Classics. When the headmaster explains the contest to the students, he mentions that Blythe's father was once a "Mr. Julius Caesar".

Hundert's orderly world is shaken when a new student, Sedgewick Bell, walks into his classroom later in the semester. Bell is the cocky son of a senior U.S. senator who possesses none of Hundert's principles and is willing to talk back and break the rules and getting his fellow classmates to participate. After Sedgewick plays the class clown in one of the lectures, Hundert asks him to name a single Roman Emperor. When Bell cannot, Hundert has the other students perfectly recite the line of succession of the Roman Empire effectively humiliating Bell. Hundert also makes a trip to Washington, D.C. to meet with Senator Bell. Bell's father is uninterested in his son's character development, telling Hundert just to teach Bell so he can graduate. In a phone call, Senator Bell chastises Sedgewick for wasting his father’s time in having to see Mr Hundert and money. After seeing him chastened, Hundert tries to become a mentor to Bell in order to make him a better man. Bell starts studying and his grades improve. Bell initially finishes fourth in Hundert's essay competition that precedes the contest, but Hundert raises his grade on the final essay after reviewing it again, thus eliminating Blythe. Hundert is caught between celebrating Bell's newfound success and feeling guilty when he sees a despondent Blythe. Hundert is also saddened by the fact that another teacher, with whom he has a growing friendship, is moving to England due to her husband's job.

The entire school watches the competition as the three contestants are quizzed by Hundert. After many questions, Masoudi is eliminated after answering a question incorrectly. Hundert becomes increasingly suspicious of Bell raising his toga to his head to think. When Hundert confers with the headmaster, he is urged to give Bell a pass. Hundert instead asks him a question not in the books, "Who was Hamilcar Barca?", knowing full well that the answer would not be on any materials used to cheat (it was not in the curriculum) but knowing that Mehta would be able to answer it as he saw Mehta reading about Barca in his spare time. Bell is stumped and Mehta is crowned Mr. Julius Caesar. Afterwards, Bell admits to Hundert that he cheated. Although Hundert does not publicize this, the trust he once had with Bell is broken. As the students move up to higher grades, Bell reverts back to slacking and playing class clown and barely passing his classes only gaining acceptance to Yale University due to his father's influence as a Senator. After the headmaster of St. Benedict's dies, the Board of Trustees promotes a younger, less experienced teacher (Rob Morrow) to the headmastership based on his abilities to raise funds for the cash-strapped school. Shocked by this turn of events, Hundert retires from teaching.

Meanwhile, wealthy CEO Sedgewick Bell is poised to make a gigantic contribution to St. Benedict's, but only if Hundert comes to a black tie party with all his 1973 students in a rematch of the Mr. Julius Caesar competition. In the immediate present, Hundert has accepted the terms of the contribution. The competition is preceded by a dinner showing his former students in all their success, with an adult Mehta working as a college professor teaching Classics himself. The reunion with Blythe is uncomfortable.

Masoudi is eliminated early. When Hundert notices Bell stumble on a question then recover, he notices that Sedgewick is wearing a tiny earpiece, through which a graduate student is feeding answers to him. Hundert once again asks an obscure question he had previously asked his class back in 1973, "Who was Shutruk-Nakhunte?" The reason for this was mentioned at the start of the school year by Mr. Hundert to his students. He uses the Elamite king as an example of great ambition and conquest without contribution is without significance. Bell is stumped and Mehta wins. Immediately after the competition, Sedgewick announces his plans to begin campaigning for the U.S. Senate. Hundert is furious and excuses himself to the restroom where he is met by Bell. Hundert confronts Bell on his cheating. An indifferent Bell says that Hundert has let life pass him by, whereas he will win because he is not restrained by ethics. Seeing Blythe, Hundert confesses to favoring Bell at his expense. Blythe says that it does not matter, but his body language suggests he is upset.

The day after the rematch, Hundert is then greeted by his 1973 students who give him a "surprise breakfast" and present various mementos of their time under his tutelage. Hundert realizes that although he failed with Bell, he has succeeded greatly with other students.

Hundert returns to St. Benedict's and again teaches Classics to a new class (which is now coeducational and more racially diverse than his earlier classes). It is also revealed that one of his students is Blythe's son, who is proud that his father was once Hundert's student. Hundert then looks out the window to see Martin Blythe proudly waving to him, implying that Hundert is forgiven. Hundert requests the Blythe boy read the Shutruk-Nahunte plaque over the door, just as his father once did.

Cast

Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews from critics; review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes holds a 50% "Fresh" rating, based on 123 reviews.[2] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 49 out of 100, based on 32 reviews.[3]

See also

References

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