welcome

You've reached RSL.org, a fansite dedicated to Tony Award winning actor Robert Sean Leonard, who can currently be seen on the hit television series "House". This site is happily celebrating 10 years online, and I hope that visitors new and old continue to enjoy it now and for years to come.

New Jersey Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Animals
Bradley! Happy!
projects

House "House"
James Wilson
FOX - Tuesdays, 9pm EST
official / IMDb

yay for fans
Fanlisting: 250 members!
affiliates
The Marrow of Life: Dead Poets Society SteveZahn.net
more/become?
disclaimer

This site is not, nor does it in any way claim to be, affiliated with Robert Sean Leonard, his family, his friends, his management, his childhood pets or Vanilla Ice. Any comments, questions and/or suggestions can be sent to myself, Jen, at stupefy@gmail.com.

dead poets society (1989)

Character: Neil Perry
Director: Peter Weir
Main Cast: Robin Williams, Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke, Josh Charles, Gale Hansen, Kurtwood Smith

Media: Photo Galleries
Available: VHS/DVD
Official Site: N/A
IMDb: www

featured review

Desson Howe, Washington Post, 06/09/89

I wish Robin Williams had been my English teacher. Perhaps Tomorrow-and-tomorrow-and-tomorrow wouldn't have been quite so dreary. Of course, I wouldn't have learned a thing...

In "Dead Poets Society," Peter Weir's (and screenwriter Tom Schulman's) touching private-school requiem for free thinking, he is the English teacher -- come to shake the Academy down, come to show 'em that somewhere among the three Rs is an immensely pleasurable P for poetry.

This solid, smart entertainment will shake you down too -- in the good sense. You'll be reaching for Shelley. Okay, maybe you won't reach for Shelley (unless you're sitting next to someone named Shelley). You'll go home and fall asleep -- but before you do, you'll feel like maybe you want to read poetry. Sometime. Meanwhile, you'll love the movie.

Before you run off expecting "Robin Williams Live": He not only turns in an acting performance (and a nicely restrained one at that), but he's not on screen half the time. "Poets" is about his influence, or teacher John Keating's influence, on a crop of impressionable young lads at Vermont's Welton Academy (actually Delaware's St. Andrew's), where learning is something you take twice daily, so you can wake up a doctor in the morning.

When new professor Keating, a Welton alumnus, brings in his subversive modus operandi (he starts by insisting his class tear out the club-headed introduction to a poetry book), it's academic liberation from then on. He has them march in circles, stand up on their desks (to see things from another perspective) and generally question conventional thinking. Little by little, his pupils (a fine classroomful of young performers -- Robert Sean Leonard, Ethan Hawke, Josh Charles, Gale Hansen and others) spread their wings.

Sure, the heroes (Williams and the Disciples of Smug) and villains (academic crustaceans and med-school-pushing parents) are arranged in a convenient moral gallery. But the performances, Weir's adroit direction and John Seale's superb cinematography take care of that banality.

"Poets'" conclusion, a tragic affair, is foreshadowed early in the syllabus -- but if you've lived more than five minutes (and they won't let you into the theater otherwise), you already know that most romantic flights of fancy inevitably crash-land. And, in any case, "Poets" also ends with an uplifting note that peals a bell for intellectual freedom, creativity and, if nothing else, more Robin Williams movies.