

For a preachy, unevenly-acted thriller about the threat of a school shooting, the indie “Honor Student” certainly punches above its weight.
Director and co-writer Tamika Miller gets into the messy politics of gun control, references earlier school massacres, from Columbine to Sandy Hook to Parkland, and takes inspiration from Aurora (a cinema shooting). Characters pay lip service to “movie” and “video game violence.”
And still one character clings to the hope that one more shooting, as awful but no more awful than many others, will awaken American moral outratgdemocracy and provoke action.
As if the Russian-financed National Rifle Association couldn’t bribe that to a halt. Again.
Kelly Jenrette of TV’s “All American: Homecoming” stars as Mrs. Hill, a single mom/school teacher with a pressing appointment at the end of this particular workday.
That doesn’t mean she doesn’t have time for the upper class kids of Kingsley Academy, where she teaches. You’d be hard-pressed to find a “public” school teacher who’d let herself get lured into a chat about a boy this girl (Olivia Simmons) hopes against hope he will ask her to the prom.
And rushed as she is, she’ll make time for Harvard-bound Jeremy Chue (Hudson Yang), an over-achiever whose father’s (Kelvin Han Yee) expectations are “class valedictorian,” because anything less just won’t do.
Jeremy is popular, nobody’s idea of a social outsider. But he’s carrying a burden most everybody knows about. What they don’t know is what he’s got in his cello case this particular school day.
It takes a couple of agonizing minutes for the rushed Mrs. Hill to get the kid past his explanation of a chess “gambit” and figure out what he means by “sacrificial pawns.”
“I think someone’s going to shoot up the school,” he says. And then, our comes the gun.
Jeremy’s got a silencer-tipped 9mm, for starters. And he’s got his reasons for locking her in this classroom with him until that moment when school lets our and he plans to make all hell break loose.
Flashbacks to formative moments each character’s earlier life are animated, an interesting choice.
Miller — “The Christmas Lottery” and “Undercard” were hers — and co-writer Joe Rechtman squeeze a lot of teen “logic” and racial politics into their script, folding many of the thought exercises and screeds into Yang’s character.
“Ever get tired of the knee on your neck,” the minority kid asks his African-American teacher? A fair question.
But Yang blurts much of his dialogue, which sounds recited and rushed rather than acted and lived.
Jenrette takes a LONG time to register the proper degree of shock and terror.
And the logic of the whole talking villain exercise, which the teacher spends her energy trying to puncture, is malignant wishful thinking of the worst sort. As smart Jeremy himself says, if this country didn’t take drastic steps to curb gun ownership and machine gun sales after the mass murder of little kids at Sandy Hook, well…
The film, shortened by ten minutes for its Amazon release, only achieves the proper pitch in the clock-ticking-down third act. But there are provocative ideas, stances and “solutions” packed into this preachy picture. For a simple two-hander, with basically one setting, it certainly does punch above its weight, even if it never manages more than a glancing blow or two.
Rating: TV-MA, violence, profanity
Cast: Kelly Jenrette, Hudson Yang, Kelvin Han Yee and Olivia Simmons.
Credits: Directed by Tamika Miller, scripted by Joe Rechtman and Tamika Miller. A Deskpop release on Amazon Prime.
Running time: 1:24



















