Ah, Dan Waters. For me, one of the big question marks among writers. I mean...he wrote "Heathers," one of the more perfect movies of the past 15-20 years. He then spent the rest of the '90s writing (or at least having his name attached to) varying degrees of crap (Two words: "Hudson Hawk").
I have not seen his direct-to-video directorial debut, "Happy Campers" but perhaps I should.
Well, now I have, thanks to the Sundance Channel's frequent airings. Here's the premise: The sole adult counselor at a summer camp for boys and girls just entering puberty is struck by lightning. The college-age counselors therefore turn the camp into a pit of sexual anarchy.
Not a bad launching place, I hope you'll agree. Lot of places you could go. Unfortunately, it doesn't work.
The biggest problems, it seems to me, are these:
- The film tries too hard to be hip-as opposed to "Heathers" which was effortlessly so.
- It's too smart to be the sex/grossout comedy it sometimes wants to be.
- But not smart enough to be the incisive critique of young relationships it also wants to be.
- Not enough of the jokes connect. One or two of those that do connect nicely, though.
- After intruiging starts for all of them, the characters never really pay off.
It's not without its charms-chiefly an attractive cast that shows they deserve better movies than they usually get (we're talking about the stars of the films "New Best Friend," "The Rage: Carrie 2," "Cherry Falls" and "Crossroads" in the same movie here).
Still, though. On balance, this fucks my hopeful "Daniel Waters is still a good writer, he's just been screwed over by talentless hack directors" theory all to hell.
The stars of "Happy Campers," reading their script and wishing it were better.
(Brief aside: "Cherry Falls" is remarkably similar to "Happy Campers" in that it squanders an idea with a lot of potential for "pushing the envelope" in teen sexuality: Local teens realize a serial killer is preying on the virgins among them; they decide there's only one way to take themselves off his list. Unfortunately, they didn't make much more of it than "Happy Campers" does with its premise.)
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