The Kings of Summer (DVD REVIEW)
The Kings of Summer
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Teens Retreat
to Forest in Quirky, Coming-of-Age Comedy
Freshman year of high school has
just ended for Patrick (Gabriel Basso) who isn’t looking forward to spending
the summer under the same roof as his helicopter parents (Megan Mullally and
Marc Evan Jackson), given their monitoring his every move and their merciless
teasing about his raging hormones. The situation’s even worse for Joe (Nick
Robinson) whose widowed father’s (Nick Offerman) way of grieving involves
belittling and grounding him at the drop of a hat.
One night at a keg party, the best
friends come up with a viable solution to their predicament when they discover
a clearing in the middle of the forest. Why not build themselves a house out in
the woods where they will finally be free from the abuse and control of
meddling adults?
Swearing each other to secrecy, the
malcontents hatch an impromptu plan to live off the land. And they are joined
in the clandestine endeavor by classmate Biaggio (Moises Arias), a mysterious
weirdo wiling to tag along and utter an occasional, odd non sequitur.
Next thing you know, they’re
building a shack out of materials found on a construction lot, and also
foraging for food by diving into a dumpster behind a restaurant. Meanwhile,
their worried folks are calling the cops, convinced the missing boys must have
been kidnapped.
That is the absorbing point of
departure of The Kings of Summer, a quirky, coming-of-age comedy marking the
magnificent directorial debut of Jordan Vogt-Roberts. His laugh-a-minute
adventure is reminiscent of some the best of the rebellious adolescent genre,
ala Stand by Me (1986), Superbad (2007), Ghost World (2001), Super 8 (2011) and
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986).
The picture’s clever script by
first-timer Chris Galletta is laced with lots of hilarious scenes like when
Biaggio attempts to throw the police off their trail with a ransom note from
the fictitious “Jamal Colorado” inspired by a combining a black first name with
one of the fifty states. But human oddity Biaggio is basically around to
provide intermittent comic relief.
At heart, the movie is about the
intrepid trio’s struggle to survive while eluding the frantic search party. The
plot thickens upon the sudden arrival of Kelly (Erin Moriarty) at the lad’s
lair, a cutie pie Joe’s interested in dating.
Will the fetching femme fatale prove
to be the boys’ undoing? Or will their bond remain intact? No spoilers here.
Suffice to say that between a host of memorable performances by a cast of
relative newcomers, and a haunting, grungy score by Ryan Miller, The Kings of
Summer is a bona fide sleeper not to be missed.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R
for profanity and underage alcohol consumption
In English and Italian with subtitles
Running time: 95
minutes
Distributor: Sony
Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Cast and
crew commentary; and an on-set interview with Alison Brie and Eugene Cordero.
To order a copy of The
Kings of Summer on DVD, visit: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos
/ASIN/B00C7BZZAA/ref%3dnosim/thslfofire-20
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