- 1Movie Overview
- 2Direction & Cinematography
- 3Cast & Performances
- 4Character Psychology
- 5Themes & Emotional Depth
- 6Memorable Scenes & Dialogue
- 7The Ending — Does It Deliver?
- 8What Works
- 9Honest Criticism
- 10How It Compares
- 11Legacy & Cultural Impact
- 12Behind the Scenes
- 13Who Should Watch It?
- 14Final Verdict


- Genre: Horror, Science Fiction
- Director: Robert Rodriguez
- Year: 1998
- Runtime: 1h 44m
- Language: English (EN)
- TMDB Rating: ⭐ 6.6/10
Movie Overview
Herrington High looks normal at first glance—just another Texas school where jocks bully nerds and teachers drone on about algebra. But when the school nurse pulls a worm-like parasite from her own eye, a group of students realize something's deeply wrong. Zeke (Josh Hartnett), the school's resident drug dealer, teams up with outcast Casey (Elijah Wood), cheerleader Delilah (Jordana Brewster), and others to investigate their increasingly inhuman teachers. What starts as suspicion becomes a fight for survival when they discover the faculty are being replaced by alien parasites. The real horror kicks in when they can't tell who's still human—including each other. That paranoia becomes the film's strongest weapon. By the third act, even a shared soda feels like a life-or-destakes moment.
Direction & Cinematography
Robert Rodriguez shoots this like a western with aliens—wide shots of the school's empty halls feel like a frontier under siege. The camera lingers just long enough on mundane details (a coffee mug, a pencil sharpener) to make them unsettling when they reappear later. What struck me on rewatch is how little he relies on gore; the scariest moment might be a teacher's too-wide smile during a detention scene. But the pacing stumbles when the kids split up mid-film—some of those side trips could've been trimmed. Still, Rodriguez nails the finale, staging the big showdown in the school's boiler room like a punk-rock version of The Thing.
Cast & Performances
Josh Hartnett steals every scene as Zeke, especially when he deadpans pseudo-scientific drug explanations to his classmates. It's a shame the script sidelines Jordana Brewster's Delilah after giving her a killer early moment where she stabs a teacher with a pen. Elijah Wood makes Casey's transformation from bullied kid to reluctant hero believable—watch how his hunched posture straightens during the final confrontation. Clea DuVall gets less to work with as the goth girl Stokely, though her dry delivery on lines like 'I'm not gay, I'm just… not interested' still lands. Shawn Hatosy's jock Stan feels like a missed opportunity—his arc resolves too neatly.
Character Psychology
Casey spends the first act just wanting to survive another day of bullying. What he needs—and finds—is the confidence to fight back. The film's smartest move is making his growth feel earned, not miraculous. Zeke already knows who he is. His journey isn't about change, but proving his cynicism wrong—people are worth saving, even teachers.
Themes & Emotional Depth
This is a film about trust. Every alliance between the kids starts with mutual suspicion—the jock hates the nerd, the cheerleader dismisses the goth girl. Their survival depends on overcoming those stereotypes. Rodriguez frames their teamwork as a rebellion; when they finally share Zeke's homemade drugs (their only weapon), it plays like a twisted version of communion.
Memorable Scenes & Dialogue
The football coach's death scene works because of how ordinary it starts—he's just complaining about field maintenance when the parasite bursts from his neck. Rodriguez holds the shot too long, making the gore feel shocking instead of gratuitous. Later, the 'who's human?' test involving a pencil to the hand crackles with tension because the actors sell the fear—you believe they'd actually stab a friend. Best of all is the cold open where a teacher drowns a student in a toilet; it sets the stakes immediately with zero exposition.
The Ending — Does It Deliver?
The finale pays off every paranoid thread when the kids turn on each other. I'll admit I didn't expect the film to commit to its bleakest idea—that the real monster might be human nature. The actual resolution feels a bit rushed, but that final shot of the school reopening lingers. After everything, the system just… continues.
What Works
Hartnett's performance gives the film its sneaky heart—his Zeke is both hilarious and unexpectedly noble. The practical effects hold up better than CGI would have, especially the parasite designs. Rodriguez stages several scenes with silent tension that outshines the louder set pieces. That cold open remains one of the best in 90s horror.
Honest Criticism
The middle section drags when the group splits up—Stokely's solo investigation adds little. Some teachers become cartoonish too quickly, undercutting the fear. The ending wraps up too neatly after all the paranoia, though that might be a studio note.
How It Compares
It's smarter than most 90s teen horror but not as sharp as Scream. The alien premise owes a lot to Body Snatchers, but Rodriguez's grungy aesthetic makes it feel fresh. Where it beats similar films is in casting—Hartnett and Wood have way more chemistry than your average horror leads.
Legacy & Cultural Impact
Made for $15 million, it grossed $40 million—solid for a genre flick in 1998. Critics were mixed (Roger Ebert called it 'clever but forgettable'), but it's since gained a cult following. You can see its DNA in later films like Disturbing Behavior, though none nailed the balance of humor and horror quite as well.
Behind the Scenes
The studio wanted Leonardo DiCaprio as Zeke; Rodriguez fought for Hartnett. The cafeteria food fight was improvised—most of the cast got real food thrown at them. That's real panic in Elijah Wood's eyes during the pencil-stabbing scene; the actors didn't rehearse it.
Who Should Watch It?
Fans of 90s horror or smart B-movies will love this. Viewers who need nonstop gore or airtight logic should skip it.
Final Verdict
The Faculty deserves its cult status. It's not perfect—the pacing wobbles, and not every performance lands—but Rodriguez's direction and Hartnett's star-making turn make it more than just a Body Snatchers clone. Watch it for the scene where a high school drug dealer becomes the unlikeliest action hero of 1998.
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