Movie Pie, October, 2006
You will not a find a more entertaining, heartfelt or unapologetically spirited documentary anywhere this year. You won't. In fact, I dare you to try.

Because, seriously, Summercamp! is fantastic. It's hilarious. It's moving. It's nostalgic and sentimental. It's a total blast from start to finish. And my reluctance to us excessive punctuation is the only thing preventing me from ending each of those statements with an exclamation mark.

The film will draw inevitable comparisons to Spellbound because it has some similar themes, not the least of which is training its lens on quirky kids and watching them in the full splendor of their quirkiness. This time, though, the children in question aren't learning to spell complex words, they're packing up their teddy bears and favorite pillows to head off to sleep-away camp for three weeks. Following a group of Illinois campers from their homes to a Wisconsin nature retreat, the film features all the staples of camp life: activities, homesickness, cabin pranks, first crushes, frightful food and inter-camper conflict. A number of the kids become touchstones for the audience, including Holly (who has an almost obsessive appreciation for chickadees), Cameron (an overweight teen who's the oldest boy in his group) and more than a few outsiders who love camp because it affords them the luxury of being themselves and making friends. There's the boy who nonchalantly explains how his very-successful attorney father is never home, the kids who compare their levels of ADD, and the awkward young girl who laments that she has no friends at home.

You will laugh much more often than you'll tear up during Summercamp! but, rest assured, you will get sniffly. If the more subtle moments of poignancy (a comforting bedtime story, a gesture of friendship, a woeful letter home) don't get to you (like they got to me!), then one scene in particular &endash; which comes unexpectedly and out of left field &endash; should do you in. And that's part of what makes the movie so great. It would have been easy for filmmakers Brad Beesley and Sarah Price to poke fun at their subjects, but instead they infuse the film with a gigantic, squishy heart, and the duo show a true love and appreciation for the kids they've been filming as much as the entire camp experience as a whole.

I heard some people at the Toronto Film Festival say they passed on this movie because they never attended camp themselves and didn't think they could relate to the film's content. I couldn't disagree more! With all its joy and merriment, Summercamp! gently addresses universal themes like friendship, family, unity, heartbreak, fear and uncertainty. It is easily accessible to anyone, whether or not they've ever braided gimp, sung the "Baby Shark" song or slathered calomine lotion on a legful of mosquito bites.

So, drop your s'mores and get thee to a screening!

Film Treat, October, 2006

Ahhhh…summer camp movies…always the hallmark of a good time &endash; "Meatballs III," "Wet Hot American Summer," "The Burning," "Sleepaway Camp," "Muddy Pig Sex." Mmmmm…the memories…But as enriching as the aforementioned films are in providing an accurate representation of summer camp fun, none of them get as close as "Summercamp!" How did they do it? Simple. They just took a camera down to a summer camp and filmed all of the action. The result? It's kinda like reality "Napoleon Dynamite."

This documentary captures the total summer camp experience by being right their with the kids as they prepare for their trip, as they arrive to camp and claim and their bunks, as they stumble through a bunch of new experiences and activities…and as they cry for mommy. Well, a few of them cry for mommy. "Summercamp!" is loaded with non-stop charm as we get to know these kids and all of their unique little quirks.

"Summercamp!" is good clean fun. Nothing really edgy here. It's just kids being goofy, having a good time, getting into trouble and even occasionally sustaining a bizarre injury - watch out for the hook on that fishing line!!! It's fun and it's honest and it will go down as one of the most entertaining movies of the year.

New York Times Friday, October 20, 2006
Documentary filmmakers Bradley Beesley and Sarah Price take viewers back to the sun-soaked days of summer as they follow campers ages 6 through 15 to a place where lifelong friendships are forged, and the struggle against homesickness yields a better understanding of the true value of independence. With music by the Flaming Lips and Noisola, Summercamp! is a warm tribute to an long-running institution that holds a special place in the hearts of countless Americans. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Chicago Tribune Sunday, October 8, 2006
Sometimes funny, sometimes sad, sometimes sweet and always engaging, this documentary about a summer at the Swift Nature Camp in Minong, Wis., is a rustic gem. Apart from kids (mostly) enjoying summer camp standards (canoeing, crafts, archery, fishing, etc.), the filmmakers get the inside scoop on what the campers and counselors are really thinking. From "who likes whom" tales of burgeoning love to the heart-wrenching reason one young girl is obsessed with finding a chickadee songbird to counselors concerned by the numbers of campers on meds for ADD, ADHD or depression, the young people really strike a chord. One of the young camp counselors offers moments of funny exasperation, for example, after nine weeks of being available to campers 24/7: "Yeah ... I dunno ... if I come back to work at a camp, it'll probably be this one, because the kids are great ... but, God, they're here forever." But the film, like so many summers, passes too quickly.

 


Click to visit the official SUMMECAMP! site