Ha ha, it’s Unca Burl here to review a summer camp picture
for you! It’s a particularly late-season example of the genre, and I really
should have waited until at least late August to even watch it, let alone
review it for you! The picture is called Indian
Summer, and it’s a real batstacker!
That term, "batstacker," may be unfamiliar to you, but hopefully this
review will provide, if not a proper definition, at least some context! Indian
Summer takes place at a summer camp in Ontario, just like Meatballs, and even features one of the stars of that venerable
production, Matt Craven, who I believe played the glasses nerd in that earlier
film! Here he plays a completely different part, a vain, irritable, utterly
shallow ladykiller, one of the most annoying characters ever seen on screen!
He’s just one of several in this ensemble cast: former
campers who’ve returned to good old Camp Tamakwa at the request of Unca Lou,
their old head counselor, who figures on retiring and closing up the camp for
good! Unca Lou is played by Alan Arkin, whom we know and love so well from Catch-22 and Heck’s Way Home, and I can tell you he’s a welcome sight!
Bill “Weird Science”
Paxton plays a character meant, I think, to be an edgy, Walkman-wearing
neo-hippie, who was once kicked out of the camp by Unca Lou for Some Mysterious
Reason! Kevin Pollock, of Grumpy Old Men
and its sequel, is a put-upon twerp! Diane Lane from Streets of Fire plays one of the ladies, and there are several more,
and I think one or two other fellows, including, of all people, Sam Raimi, the
director of Evil Dead II, playing a
comedy dogsbody! None of them except Raimi are particularly likeable, and they all spend the
bulk of the movie interacting with one another in a variety of ways, and there
are some conflicts, ha ha, but nothing of much consequence happens!
I assume this is by design: that Mike Binder, the director,
went to one of these camps, loved it, and decided to make this picture as a
tribute to his experience, while being careful not to blemish the memory with
too much drama! Fine, except he’s made one of those movies which those of us
who never went to this particular camp (or any summer camp) will watch and
wonder why on earth anyone would bother expending the effort on such a film!
Ol’ Burl understands as well as anyone the powerful grip of nostalgia, also the
urge to dramatize formative adolescent experiences, but this particular result
is about as substantial and satisfying as a puff!
The location is very nice though, very lakey, and as I
mention, it’s always nice to see The Bean himself (or was he Freebie?) acting
in his laid-back, homespun Unca Lou style! Ha ha! I appreciated Sam Raimi’s
efforts too, because he clearly relished the opportunity to perform some of the
slapstick comedy he loves so well! For a non-actor he’s not bad (most directors
are well able to act, I find!), but why he’s in it at all is nevertheless as
much a mystery as why the thing was ever made! I'll tell you, this is a summer camp movie where you wish and wish it would suddenly turn into Friday the 13th or The Burning, just to be rid of some of these characters!
Ha ha! Well, you can see that I didn’t think much of this
picture, though it’s not all bad, and they play “Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah”
over the end credits! If you want an ensemble nostalgia picture you could
probably do worse, but you could for sure do a whole lot better! I give Indian Summer one long-buried boxing
trophy!
I'd totally forgotten about this, I rented it on video at the time because I liked Diane Lane and hated it! It really is about next to nothing and sentimental too. I learnt an important lesson that day: just because an actress you like is in a movie, doesn't mean she is always wise in her career choices.
ReplyDeleteThat is indeed a critical lesson in film enjoyment! And yes, this is really a very st*nky movie, and sappier than one of the lofty pines which are its true stars!
ReplyDeleteApparently the Bill Paxton character is based on Josh Becker, a filmmaker who grew up with Binder, Raimi, and Bruce Campbell, and wo worked with them throughout his career, while never achieving their level of success.
ReplyDeleteThat's an interesting bit of trivia! I know who Becker is, though have never seen any of his movies! I've always meant to check out Thou Shalt Not Kill... Except!
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