Barton portrays one of its alumni in a film that is uniquely and fantastically British. The institution of St. Trinian has yet again fallen on tough times as the bank is on the verge of closing the ...
The infamous school for ‘young ladies’, St Trinian’s, is once again facing dire financial crisis. While unorthodox headmistress Camilla Fritton struggles to deal with the new Education Minister ...
Reviving a long-dormant series of British boarding-school comedies, St. Trinian's opens with youth-in-revolt vignettes that suggest an all-girl Lord of the Flies. At heart, though, the movie is as ...
“St. Trinian’s” Movie Review -- The original “St. Trinian’s” films, dating back to the 1950s, were chapters in a hugely popular British series featuring a run-down school for girls and its ...
Buoyed by bonny B.O. in Blighty and ace ancillary, the belles of Britain’s most anarchic private school get to ride again in “St. Trinian’s: The Legend of Fritton’s Gold,” a much-improved modern ...
Ronald Searle's little schoolgirl demons from St. Trinian's are berserk again on the screen in a yarn with a topical twist, the [1963] Great Train Robbery. Ronald Searle’s little schoolgirl demons ...
across the UK as one of the worst schools in the country. When the country’s new Education Minister (Colin Firth) decides to reform the nation’s educational system, he sets his sights on St Trinian’s.