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6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Feel good movie that takes you back to your youth., 5 December 2011
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Author:
jbailey618 from Oregon, United States
I definitely recommend this movie for your whole family. While the
whole summer camp troubled youth bit has been done 100 times, this is a
great one that will put a smile on your face and take you back to a
summer in your childhood when you went to camp and grew as a young man
or woman and got the first taste of being away from home. I'm not going
to even comment on the technicalities of movie making, because they
don't matter one bit. The only thing that matters is that you smile,
laugh, and even maybe tear up just a bit watching this movie.
Grab your kids, make some popcorn, and just relax and enjoy this cool
movie.
I watched it and lived; so can you! A pretty good movie for what it tries to do., 24 May 2012
Author:
Aesher Ashley from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Full disclosure, I totally thought this film was going to be the
quintessential loser camp vs. jock camp flick that has been done a
hundred times before. While many familiar elements are there, the story
stands on its own as a tale of one man overcoming his own fears and
seeding positive change amongst a group of rag-tag misfits
wait a
second
okay, yeah, maybe it was closer to my original guess than I had
previously thought. Regardless, the Rainbow Tribe was an enjoyable
family comedy I would recommend you watch if you have 90 minutes to
kill (with family) and don't mind being shamelessly manipulated from
laughter to tears.
The plot for the Rainbow Tribe is campy at best (no pun intended), yet
it works to simply set the stage for the viewer to autopilot into the
film. Troubled counselor + troubled kids + summer camp = hilarious
situational comedy! Because it isn't necessary to spend a whole lot of
time setting up the plot of the film, more time can be spent enjoying
sight gags, childish antics, and subtle adult humor.
While the characters of the Rainbow Tribe are presented rather "cookie
cutter-esk," they are given enough fluff to make them more than just
two-dimensional carbon copies of summer camp-goers of yore. Since the
aforementioned plot requires little heavy lifting, more time was spent
in the movie seeding character tidbits which eventually came to
fruition either in the form of laughter, tears or both.
The acting for this movie was somewhat mixed. However, I feel it only
fair to address the adult actors and child actors separately. To begin
with, David James Elliot (whom my mother loves from JAG) provided a lot
of heart to this film and, arguably, puts up with a lot of punishment
from its production. His ability to maintain a serious undertone to his
otherwise lighthearted acting helps bring his character (internal
struggles and all) to life. He plays off of the supporting cast very
well, especially the child actors whom he is constantly surrounded by
and appears to have a genuine bond with. Ed Quinn and Julie Ann Emery
play the sort of supporting cast that is strong in all the right
places.
Very rarely are you going to find child actors who can act in a family
comedy without them seeming a little cheesy or scripted. No offense,
but typically the scarily amazing method acting child genius prodigies
reserve their talent for more
*cough* "serious" roles than this film
provided.
That being said, I felt the talent pool of child actors in this film
had some real depth to it. Special mention needs to be made to Grayson
Russell and Max Burkholder. Russell, reprising a role eerily familiar
to Texas Ranger from Talladega Nights (albeit less hostile), has a good
sense of comedic timing and a colorful presence on camera. Burkholder,
to his credit, manages to nonverbally communicate a surprising range of
emotions and quietly creeps his way into your heart (where he snuggles
for the rest of the movie).
From a technical standpoint, the movie has a few bugs. A couple of the
mid and far away stunts appear cluttered, while a few of the more close
up stunts look like they actually brought physical harm to one or more
of the actors. The inconsistency is forgivable, however, because the
overall tone of the film leads it to focus less on the serious and more
on the humorous. The musical arrangement was nothing special, but it
wasn't distracting either.
In closing, if you are looking for an explosion ridden action adventure
blockbuster or a deeply layered mind-freak... don't watch this film. If
you want a feel-good movie that doesn't compromise the film's
characters by completely subverting their initial core character quirks
and instead embraces the idea you can change your behavior without
changing who you are, give this one a go. I promise, you will either
love it, hate it, or something in-between.
Score 8 out of 10. If this film was a sub-sandwich, it would be
untoasted and filling but with a few dry bites.
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