Mostly happy campers
- Share via
Flapping fans may have been replaced by battery-operated spritzing whirrers, computers are missed as much as mommies, and attention deficit meds are as common as hot dogs and Jell-O, but the yearly school-break tradition of kids attending woodsy retreats continues.
Bradley Beesley and Sarah Price’s soft, brisk and generally surface-deep documentary “Summercamp!” chases one group of Illinois-area children for three weeks at Wisconsin’s Swift Nature Camp, where the hard work of keeping energetic kids busy, happy and focused -- one counselor brags that ADD “goes away” there -- is clearly a 24-hour-a-day gig. There’s the sense, however, that the filmmakers have their own concentration problem, because too often we’re whisked away from spending quality time with the film’s pint-size subjects.
But brief bits of real charm, personality and camp-life detail squeeze through, suggesting why some thrive in an oasis of animal worship, outdoor revelry and zero-to-hero popularity that forgives a nerdy rep back home .
Then there’s 13-year-old Cameron, a beefy, homesick outcast who is stuck between alienating peers on one side and disciplining counselors on the other.
Nestled in the hug of a camp employee who doesn’t yet know that Cameron is about to be punished for connecting a hurled Hacky Sack to his tormentor’s groin, he answers the nurturing counselor’s question about what he likes about camp with the kind of heartbreaking logic only a child could come up with: “I like almost everything -- except the kids are mean to me.”
--
“Summercamp!” MPAA rating: Running time: 1 hour, 25 minutes. At Laemmle’s Grande, 345 S. Figueroa St., downtown L.A. (213) 617-0268.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.