|
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
To keep his dad at bay, not to mention his mom (Rachel Harris), who’s decided to start a “Reading is Fun!” club, Greg lies and says he has a job at his pal Rowley’s (Robert Capron) country club. He goes there every day and enjoys swimming, drinking smoothies and hanging out with the pretty Holly (Peyton List). But his older brother, Rodrick (Devon Bostick), is onto him, and to keep his ruse going, Greg is forced to sneak Rodrick in through the back. He’s looking to promote his band and impress Holly’s older sister (Melissa Roxburgh). And so the perfect summer begins. Only it’s not the perfect summer - not when reality kicks in and Greg discovers things don’t always go according to plan, especially when you lie and deceive your friends and family. He also learns it’s a lot harder to accept your parents being disappointed in you than simply yell at you. There’s a strong scene in the middle of the film related to this where Steve Zahn’s acting proves the movie isn’t all mindless fun and games, which is something older viewers will appreciate. Younger ones may even learn from it. The movie also faithfully re-creates some of those awkward (yet funny) coming-of-age moments that all kids eventually face, like having to look down or away in the men’s locker room; or enduring your friend’s parents when it’s obvious they don’t like you; or bunking in the same room with someone who snores. Such things unfortunately don’t get easier with age, but at least we can see the humor in them. Dog Days is no masterpiece, but it wins us over on a couple levels: 1) as a breezy family comedy with a few sharp moments of humility and slapstick; 2) as a semi-perceptive fable about those prepubescent years when your voice hasn’t fully changed, you feel ugly and you start to realize it’s inevitable you’re going to grow further apart from your parents. At this point, there may be room for one more Wimpy Kid movie with the current cast (there are a total of seven books so far), but after that, I’d say it’s time to move on, because I can’t envision Diary of a Wimpy Teenager being as clean or family friendly.
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
Thursday, October 31, 2024 © 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc. |