After Adolescence*, one of the major streaming platforms returns with another film tackling a pressing social issue — this time distilled into just ninety minutes.
The story unfolds through waves of anger, extreme reactions, irrational passion and an unyielding sense of vocation.
Digging deeper?
Starring Cillian Murphy, the movie Steve draws us into a single day in the lives of teachers working on the outermost edge of the education system — professionals whose work demands not only endless patience and perseverance but deep compassion as they try to reach and guide society’s most troubled teens.
In Hungary, these students would be placed in special education classes — gyógypedagógiai osztály. Through their specific needs the film reflects on the unwavering passion of teachers who uphold despite earning disgracefully low salaries.
It exposes how our social and educational systems continue to neglect these young people — simply leaving them by the roadside — while the few teachers willing to reach out are fighting for the mere chance to educate. They fight to give them a chance at life, because even beneath the hardest, most impenetrable shells, these young people hold something of immense worth — human worth.
Money, supposedly, can’t be found for them.
And yet, it would hardly be an exaggeration to say that across the world state structures couldn’t care less about the young.
Within narrow, suffocating constraints teachers keep fighting for the future — for the young themselves.
The Film
The film is perfect. The film is unsettling. The film is loud. Exactly like the relentless back-and-forth of everyday life in a special education classroom.

Cillian Murphy’s performance radiates raw, unfiltered power — a vessel for the explosive rage born of systemic neglect, a rage that must reach the highest levels before society finally understands:
one of its most essential groups — teachers struggling to survive on near-minimum wages — are the very people preparing the next generation for life.
To strip them of support is to strip away the future itself.
And let’s be clear: only those in public administration who steal and lie have reason to fear critical minds.
Beyond Murphy, the young actors in Steve deliver moments of such purity that they remind us exactly why teachers keep going.
The film offers no solution.
It leaves viewers suspended in midair — unapologetically — trapped within the unresolved reality.
With genuine shock and admiration it turns our attention to those who live their everyday lives guided by an unshakable sense of vocation.
Gratitude to the teachers who keep building the future — even when the work is hard as hell.
Photos are from the wonderful vast land of the internet, thank you!
Read more about Adolescence here