Mr. Holland's Opus official wallpaper
Mr. Holland's Opus poster

Mr. Holland's Opus

  • 7.3 /10

  • 402

  • 75%

Plot

In 1965, passionate musician Glenn Holland takes a day job as a high school music teacher, convinced it's just a small obstacle on the road to his true calling: writing a historic opus. As the decades roll by with the composition unwritten but generations of students inspired through his teaching, Holland must redefine his life's purpose.

Cast

Richard Dreyfuss as Glenn Holland
Richard Dreyfuss

as Glenn Holland

Glenne Headly as Iris Holland
Glenne Headly

as Iris Holland

Jay Thomas as Bill Meister
Jay Thomas

as Bill Meister

Olympia Dukakis as Principal Jacobs
Olympia Dukakis

as Principal Jacobs

William H. Macy as Vice Principal Gene Wolters
William H. Macy

as Vice Principal Gene Wolters

Alicia Witt as Gertrude Lang
Alicia Witt

as Gertrude Lang

Terrence Howard as Louis Russ
Terrence Howard

as Louis Russ

Damon Whitaker as Bobby Todd
Damon Whitaker

as Bobby Todd

Jean Louisa Kelly as Rowena Morgan
Jean Louisa Kelly

as Rowena Morgan

Alexandra Boyd as Sarah Olmstead
Alexandra Boyd

as Sarah Olmstead

Movie Facts

Rated

  • PG

Status

  • Released

Release Date

  • December 29, 1995

Production Companies

  • Hollywood Pictures

  • Interscope Communications

  • PolyGram Filmed Entertainment

  • The Charlie Mopic Company

Production Countries

  • United States of America

Spoken Language

  • English

Budget

  • $31,000,000.00

Revenue

  • $106,300,000.00

Runtime

  • 2.38 hrs

Links

Gallery

Reviews

***Taking a bypass from your dreams and finding your true calling*** A composer (Richard Dreyfuss) puts his lofty ambitions on hold to become a high school music teacher in Portland, Oregon, from 1965-1995. Glenne Headly plays his wife, Jay Thomas the coach, Olympia Dukakis the principal and William H. Macy the irritating vice principal. "Mr. Holland’s Opus" (1995) is a good school-ori…

**Another good film about an outstanding teacher marking the lives of his students... another one.** One of the things I like most about a film, in addition to telling a good story and positively entertaining us for an hour or two, is to reflect on different subjects and themes. This exercise of critical questioning, free and reachable to the public, much more attractive than a six-hundred-pag…