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Meatballs

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Meatballs (1979)

June. 28,1979
|
6.2
|
PG
| Comedy
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Tripper is the head counselor at a budget summer camp called Camp Northstar. In truth, he's young at heart and only marginally more mature than the campers themselves. Tripper befriends Rudy, a loner camper who has trouble fitting in. As Tripper inspires his young charges to defeat rival Camp Mohawk in the annual Olympiad competition, Rudy plays matchmaker between Tripper and Roxanne, a female counselor at Northstar.

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Exoticalot
1979/06/28

People are voting emotionally.

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Chirphymium
1979/06/29

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

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Bluebell Alcock
1979/06/30

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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Keeley Coleman
1979/07/01

The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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fedor8
1979/07/02

Strangely enough, MB gets better with age. The fact that I had never seen it before might mean that I am not 100% qualified to make that statement. (Then again, when has THAT ever prevented me – or Obama – from saying anything unqualified?) That is to say, while MB would have (most probably) left me busy wiping tears of boredom 20-30 years ago, it now has the nostalgia bonus that so many 70s films have these days – at least for those viewers who can appreciate what made that decade so special. (I don't mean the undistilled "joy" of having Jimmy Carter infesting the White House.) It was almost impossible to make a movie in the 70s and not make it look good; the proof of that being that even Ivan Reitman had done it, and he is notorious for having zero aesthetics. He's always been the competent producer, always the money-maker, very rarely the "artiste".There is a lot Bill Murray can do with a mediocre script, but even he isn't a magician. There was real potential here, though. The set-up is very good, actually; the characters are good enough, and the cast playing them even better; the kids look natural and act naturally. The hitch is the poor gag-writing. If only someone had been brought in to tweak the script a bit, fatten it up, improve upon it, this could have been a funny comedy and not just a visually-pleasing piece of 70s nostalgia. As it is, MB falls squarely into the "mildly fun to watch, but very rarely funny" category of comedies.If this movie gets you roaring with laughter, you're either 11 years old, or you're high on laughing gas.For those of you hoping for Porky's-like raunchiness, there is no toplessness. However, there are no bras either.

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Scott LeBrun
1979/07/03

"Meatballs" does pretty well at milking laughs out of a rite of passage for many American people, the summer camp experience. True that the script isn't anything great, this functions on an often juvenile level, and not all of the jokes are terribly funny, but it works because of a basic likability. This viewer thought it was pretty harmless. Maybe in the scenes between Tripper and Rudy does it get too maudlin, but these scenes are effective at humanizing the Tripper character. Overall, it's a solid vehicle for SNL star Bill Murray, making the most of his first lead role. It's hard not to laugh at some of his morning announcements, the TV interview, and his big show stopping "It just doesn't matter!" speech.Murray plays Tripper, the head counselor at Camp North Star, a man with a wacky approach to life. There's not much of a story here (screenplay credit goes to Len Blum, Daniel Goldberg, Janis Allen, and Harold Ramis), but among the antics are the pranks Tripper and his fellow counselors (among them, Jack Blum ("Happy Birthday to Me"), Keith Knight ("My Bloody Valentine"), and Matt Craven ("Crimson Tide")) play on camp director Morty (Harvey Atkin), Tripper reaching out to a shy and lonely young camper, Rudy (Chris Makepeace, "My Bodyguard") who just wants to make friends, and the final Olympiad where Camp North Star competes with the more macho and aggressive Camp Mohawk youngsters.It's not too hard to identify with many of these characters, especially during their more awkward moments. By the end you really are rooting for them, and are enjoying the big finale involving a race through the woods.In addition to Murray, the rest of the cast does well, with Kate Lynch able to hold her own opposite the comedy star, playing the object of his affections. The lovely Kristine De Bell also appears as one of the counselors.Best of all, director Ivan Reitman keeps the gags coming right through the end credits.Overall, this is good natured fun and something that I can't believe anybody would hate.Eight out of 10.

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tavm
1979/07/04

A year after John Belushi hit it big in the movies with Animal House, fellow SNLer Bill Murray would do the same with Meatballs with help from director Ivan Reitman-who was a producer on AH-and that film's co-writer Harold Ramis. Also from the Belushi picture was music composer Elmer Bernstein who would provide scores for other Reitman/Murray/Ramis movies like Stripes and Ghostbusters. Anyway, Murray provides great laughs with his charismatic wild-man persona as a camp counselor who helps a shy young boy (Chris Makepace) get out of his shell and a fellow female staff member (Kate Lynch) fall for him. Another staff member is Morty (Harvey Atkin) who falls victim to many of Bill's practical jokes. Then there's Spaz (Jack Blum, brother of the movie's co-writer Len Blum) and his buddy Fink (Keith Knight) who provide a touchingly humorous nerd-&-tubby vibe. There's also some sex appeal in the person of Wendy (Cindy Girling) and a girl-next-door one in A.L. (Kristine DeBell though she's probably best known for being Alice in the X-rated version of Alice in Wonderland). In other words, there's a nice mix of one-liners, slapstick, and sentimentality though it doesn't go overboard on the latter. Not everything works but Meatballs is still-all these years later-a good comedy worth watching especially for the first starring role of Bill Murray. Oh, how I loved hearing "Spaz! Spaz! "Spaz!" and "It just doesn't matter!" once again...

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avaloswrld
1979/07/05

Meatballs is a great, feel-good movie. The first time I saw this movie was 1981 on HBO. I was 13 and loving every moment. I just finished watching it again, thanks to the 50+ movie channels satellite offers these days.Anyways, not only is Meatballs the excellent feel-good movie every young boy and 30 something should watch, it reminds me of the times I had in summer camp when was 7-10 years old. Bill Murray really makes the movie, as does "Rudy." The movie really shows how boys and girls did act at summer camp. Now, my summer camps were all church summer camps, but as young kids we all wanted the same things; to be accepted by others and fit in, and to have a shot at holding a girl's hand and maybe getting a kiss. those times were always great.Thanks to Ivan Reitman, we have a movie to ensure rekindling of great memories and laughs.

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