At 16, the world is your so-called oyster. The possibility of a pearl shines bright. You are fearless, excited and really believe you’ll be able to achieve something spectacular in the 70 or 80 years ahead.
But that isn’t so for Liam Wood.
Liam doesn’t have many options available to him, life is not an abundance of opportunity. Liam’s father is serving 20 years in prison as the result of a botched casino hold-up. His mother is trying to keep the family above the poverty line and Liam’s elder brother, Steve, is heading down the same rough road his father started on.
There’s only one thin thread that Liam is grasping onto, his secret love of acting, which his drama teacher taps into in order to reach him.
Ms. Chalmers, unlike the other adults in his world, goes out of her way to tell Liam he is NOT just another delinquent youth destined to be like his elder brother and father.
The story you just read is the plot of Around The Block, a new release Australian film set in a Redfern housing precinct run by the Aboriginal community in Sydney.
The film raises the question – should we place all the responsibility to shape and mould our children on teachers? Should we rely on teachers to make sure kids don’t hang out with the wrong crowd? Is it a teacher’s job to encourage our kids to find something they are passionate about? Something for them to practice every night, instead of hanging out at the local oval with their friends looking for a fight, with raging teenage hormones.
Just as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Around the Block. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
Is this what we expect?
In this film, that is exactly what happens to Liam. The few people he has in the world, tell him he’s one thing and one thing only, but it takes just one person, a high school teacher, to show him who else he could be.
The actor who plays Liam, Hunter Page-Lochard has a different story. Hunter didn’t need extra motivation from a teacher.