Hi, bananas! It’s Burl! Ha ha, I’m here to review a John
Hughes picture I’d never seen before! I thought, ha ha, since I’ve enjoyed many
of his other works, like Weird Science
and so on, so forth, I should give this one a look too! Plus it has John “Armed & Dangerous” Candy as the
titular avunculus, so hey, why not!
The important thing in setting up a high concept late-80s
comedy like this is establishing the situation, however unlikely it might be!
We have a family, and a well-to-do one it is from the look of their giant
house! Presumably they live in Shermer, the same Chicago suburb wherein dwell
Ferris Bueller, the Breakfast Club
gang, the lady from Sixteen Candles
and so forth!
But, ha ha, they have a problem! More of an inconvenience,
really! The spectacularly unphotogenic mother’s father is ill, and they must go
to whatever Midwestern backwater he lives in to offer succor, and for some
reason both parents must make this trip, and for some other reason the teenage
daughter can’t be relied on to provide care for the two younger children (quite
reasonable, actually); and for some other reason entirely, adequate care cannot
be found! Enter Uncle Buck, who’s meant to be a family black sheep but in
reality is a dogmatic moralist who might give the sternest Puritan a run for
his money!
The teenage daughter is a grim specimen indeed: she’s
perpetually angry for no particular reason, much like the sister in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, and she’s rude
to poor Uncle Buck and mean to her little brother, who’s played by the kid from
those Home Alone pictures! Macauley
Conklin is his name!
Meanwhile Uncle Buck has his own problems, which revolve
around his ladyfriend, Amy “Streets of Fire” Madigan! Ha ha, when will this oversized manchild finally grow up?
It’s the dynamic we see in so many 1980s comedy pictures! But here, as
wonderful as John Candy is – and he has many great moments – he never really
convinces as a dyspeptic layabout! Ha ha, he’s just too upright of a fellow!
There’s not much of a plot here, and few jokes that are
funny, and not much that sticks in the memory! For the first half of the thing, such was its polytetrafluoroethylene
character that
I wasn’t sure whether or not I'd even seen it before! It turns out I had not! And now that I have, I think there remains only one or
two Hughes-directed pictures I haven’t watched, and at least one of them concerns
a little girl and a grumpy TV star! Ha ha, I won’t be rushing out to find that
one, I don’t think!
The picture has a few endearing cameos, principally that of Mike
Starr, well known from The Money Pit
and Funny Farm, in the role of
Pooter the Clown! But beyond that, a good heart, and a few funny bits, there’s not much to recommend it! I watched it more
out of a sense of obligation, as well as the Everestian “because it was there!”
(Ha ha, I got it as part of a bulk VHS pawn shop score!) So on balance, and
after much serious consideration, I’m going to give Uncle Buck one and a half giant pancakes!