Capturing the wonderment
of childhood without slipping into sentimentality is tricky, and that’s just
what producer/writer/director Don Coscarelli achieves with Kenny & Company, the first movie that he directed alone.
Depicting the adventures of an average 12-year-old kid living in the suburbs of
southern California, the movie takes a warm look at everything from bullies to
first love to Halloween to mortality. In many ways, it’s a typical
coming-of-age comedy, and yet there’s something endearingly authentic about the
picture’s specifics. Featuring kids’-eye-view narration, the scrappy little movie
emphasizes the people, places, and things that affect the worldview of film’s young
protagonist. For viewers who were kids in the ’70s, Kenny & Company offers a blast of
pure nostalgia to the fleeting period in life when days seemed to stretch out forever.
The episodic storyline takes place in the fall, when Kenny (Dan
McCann) and his misfit buddies anxiously await Halloween. Most of the time,
Kenny explores the world alongside his best friend, Doug (A. Michael Baldwin), though the
duo somehow inherited a clumsy nerd named Sherman (Jeff Roth) as a perpetual
tag-along. The boys do foolish things like planting cherry bombs under
trashcans and sitting atop the trashcans so the resulting explosions will
launch them into the air. They also endure the practical jokes
of Doug’s father (Ralph Richmond), a Secret Service agent who finds it hilarious
to lock up kids with his handcuffs and then pretend he’s lost the keys. Kenny tries to work up the nerve to ask out his pretty classmate,
even as he clashes with a bully who demands protection money. The real world isn’t kept totally at
bay; hearing that an aging neighbor is approaching death and then
learning that his beloved dog is terminally ill forces Kenny to wrestle with
existential questions.
Although Kenny
& Company is not the slickest of movies, the piece works overall. Coscarelli keeps his kid actors from
playing cute, and he kicks the movie into overdrive during the climactic
Halloween sequence, which unfolds like a surreal horror movie. (Not
coincidentally, Coscarelli has spent most of his subsequent career making
surreal horror movies, including the Phantasm
series.) Best of all, Coscarelli gets Kenny’s attitude just right,
encapsulating the hopefulness of youth and shooting it through the prism of the
southern California sunshine. As Kenny says in a typical line of voiceover,
“What if she likes me? Boy, that’d be bitchin’. Goin’ steady with Marcy would be
great!” Seeing as how Kenny & Company
features of a scene of Doug’s father unloading his .45 and handing the gun to a
group of kids as a plaything, this movie’s all about reveling in a time that
was bereft of the everyday anxieties we take for granted today.
Kenny & Company: GROOVY
YESS!!!!! I've been trying to remember the name of this movie for 40 YEARS! When I was a kid, they ran so many movies on HBO--and I can't remember the names of half of them and it drives me nuts. THANK YOU for this website!
ReplyDeleteA quaint and simple film that goes down as smooth and easy as a large "Suicide" Slushie. I think Richard Linklater owes a little to Kenny & Co. for his Dazed and Confused.
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