Of the five or six movies Nicolas Cage made last year, only one role seemed to genuinely challenge him. In the spiky modern satire Dream Scenario, he played a paunchy, balding professor whose lofty estimation of his own intelligence was only matched by some equally towering emotional insecurities. It is an intriguing film, and Cage consciously tamped down his volcanic acting style to match his drab academic outfits. But I can’t have been the only one watching who was thinking: man, Paul Giamatti would have absolutely nailed this part.
Ever since the merlot-mocking Sideways in 2004, Giamatti has been the go-to guy for egotistical but self-sabotaging middle-aged messes. So it is pleasing that in the new retro dramedy The Holdovers – which reunites him with Sideways director Alexander Payne – Giamatti gets to do what he does best. He plays Paul Hunham, a paunchy, balding professor whose lofty estimation of his own intelligence is only matched by some equally towering emotional insecurities.
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The year is 1970 and Hunham is a happily cloistered, pipe-smoking scholar of ancient history at Barton Academy, an exclusive boys boarding school in leafy New England. He uses his knowledge of Pericles as a bludgeon to keep his gawky young charges in line. In return, they offer acidic classroom backchat and mock Hunham’s squint in private. (He has a glass eye… but which one is it?)
As a teacher, Hunham seems less interested in shaping young minds than simply knocking his overprivileged charges down a peg or two. His exasperation is not entirely unfounded. As he distributes marked exam papers with deeply withering grades, a fleeting visual gag shows that one pupil required a second attempt to spell their own name correctly.
The Holdovers is not a tale of an inspirational educator like Dead Poet’s Society. If anything, it’s more like The Breakfast Club or even The Shining. Hunham is strong-armed into staying at the school over the festive period to look after the boys who are unable to go home. With the rest of the academy mothballed, Hunham and his charges bunk in the infirmary. Long-serving kitchen head Mrs Lamb (Da’Vine Joy Randolph, previously wonderful as the sarcastic detective in Only Murders in the Building) also stays on to cook for them.