Spoiler-Free Review: TEACHER’S PET (Popcorn Frights)

August 19, 2025

Written by Joseph Perry

Joseph Perry is the Film Festival Editor for Horror Fuel; all film festival related queries and announcements should be sent to him at josephperry@gmail.com. He is a contributing writer for the "Phantom of the Movies VideoScope" and “Drive-In Asylum” print magazines and the websites Gruesome Magazine, Diabolique Magazine, The Scariest Things, B&S About Movies, and When It Was Cool. He is a co-host of the "Uphill Both Ways" pop culture nostalgia podcast and also writes for its website. Joseph occasionally proudly co-writes articles with his son Cohen Perry, who is a film critic in his own right. A former northern Californian and Oregonian, Joseph has been teaching, writing, and living in South Korea since 2008.

Official synopsis: Clara, a brilliant high school senior days away from escaping to Yale, must outwit her malevolent new English teacher when he becomes obsessed with her. As he reveals his sinister past, Clara fights a treacherous battle of wits for survival. 

Teacher’s Pet is a serial killer chiller that is well worth a watch. For me, the strongest point of Teacher’s Pet is the acting. Michelle Torian is fantastic as protagonist Clara, a teen girl who grew up in the foster care system who is thriving at a school filled with well-heeled students — until new substitute teacher Mr. Heller (Luke Barnett, who makes for a creepy psychopath here) has his say about her academic performances, that is. Barbara Crampton is always great, and here as Clara’s foster mother Sylvia she gets to show the softer dramatic side of her range more than usual. Writer/director Noam Kroll keeps the suspense well paced.

For all of its positives regarding lead performances and direction, Teacher’s Pet is full of conveniences, easy outs, and underdeveloped concepts. I don’t want to give too much away because of spoilers, but for an example early on, how does a school hire a long-term substitute teacher who viewers can assume didn’t go through a proper credentialing system the day after a full-time teacher supposedly committed suicide? This problem lasted from the beginning through the final scene for me.

Teacher’s Pet can be on the predictable side, and you’ll have to ease up on asking “But why?” questions to avoid frustration, but there’s enough here to enjoy for a serial killer shocker that boasts a villain who is easy to dislike and a protagonist for whom it is easy to root. 

Teacher’s Pet screened as part of Popcorn Frights, which ran 8/7–17, 2025 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. For more information, visit https://popcornfrights.com/.

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