
It’s worth a look. Yes, I know. It is 41 years old. So am I and 16 more.
School plights have always been popular with movies. Wildcats. Hoosiers. Fame. The Principal. Lean on Me. Mr. Holland’s Opus. Conrack. The Breakfast Club. All the Right Moves. The Paper Chase. Do we need to go on?
No, we don’t need to go on. But we can look at the list we have here and notice most of them were made in the 1980s. The one that means the most to me from this era is the movie TEACHERS. TEACHERS stars Nick Nolte. I have a soft spot for Nick. He played the lead role in Pat Conroy’s novel turned motion picture The Prince of Tides. I hold Pat Conroy and The Prince of Tides with the same regard I have for The Moody Blues and Days of Future Passed. Conroy is that important to me.
Over the years I have watched the movie TEACHERS many times. It is a good one to put on and exercise by. I know what is going to happen, just as I know I need 30 more minutes on the elliptical. This movie keeps me moving. I never give up on it. In turn, this movie never lets me down.
Sure, it is a movie. There are moments that are a little hard to believe. I have been an educator for 30 years and I don’t know a story about a guy from a mental institution posing as a substitute. I never saw a student bite a teacher on the wrist so viciously it drew blood.
Filmed in a school in Columbus, Ohio, there is little externally most of us educators can relate to when we watch this movie. The security guards opening the school in the morning don’t resonate. A student getting shot in the hallway doesn’t resonate, even if he did have a piece in his hand. But we have seen some of the administrators in the movie. We have seen some of the teachers in the movie. We have seen some of the teacher union reps in the movie. We have seen some of the school board members in the movie. Most of all, we have seen some of the students in the movie. Some of it is very real.
What is real for me, as always, is the music. Recently, I finally acquired the soundtrack for this movie on CD. Legal fights and music licensing has made this a tough piece to get a hand on, unless you wanted to part with some serious coin.

I finally found the CD for a decent price. I am listening to it as I type these words. The cassette tape in this picture is an original. It still plays after all these years. I acquired the vinyl a few years ago. On recently did I acquire the CD I have been looking to get for years. You won’t find this on streaming services. The highlights for me on the soundtrack are the songs Understanding by Bob Seger, Teacher, Teacher by 38 Special, and the great Joe Cocker tune On the Edge of a Dream.
I don’t have many musical regrets. That I did not see Joe Cocker sing live is one of them. This tune, On the Edge of a Dream, is one my favorite songs. I never tire of listening to it. I listen to it often. Fortunately, this tune has shown up on Joe Cocker compilations and is easy to find on streaming services. I listen to it more than once every week. I can’t say that about many songs. There is just such a strength to it. Cocker was a soul singer. And on this tune, he brings it all with class and soul and earnest. Had I been in the studio listening to him sing this song, I never would have thought about stepping foot in a studio to sing myself. I guess I am glad I was not there.
Speaking the rights…
Danny Johnson
Editorial Note: I just found out that Joe Cocker will be inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2025. Too late for Joe to see it.