The low-budget
family flick Summerdog is so noxious
that it manages to reflect poorly on independent filmmaking, comedy, children’s
movies, and animal-centric cinema. Featuring a no-name cast, with future
character actress/voice artist Estelle Harris the only notable participant, the
movie suffers from dumb scripting, heinously bad acting, and shameless attempts
at emotional manipulation. The pathos works about as well as the jokes, which
are played so broadly as to make the viewer feel embarrassed for everyone
involved in making Summerdog. (Picture
lots of eye-rolling and head-tilts to sell every punch line, as well as ghastly
music underscoring every would-be emotional climax) One summer, New York City
history teacher Peter Norman (James Congdon) takes his family to a remote part
of New England for a few months in nature. While there, Peter’s son, Adam
(Oliver Zabriskie), rescues a stray dog from a raccoon trap, naming the dog
“Hobo.” Naturally, the whole family falls for the dog, even skeptical matriarch
Carol (Elizabeth Eisenman). As Peter says to her at one point, “Don’t tell me
Hobo is worming his way into your little heart, too!” The family spends an
eventful summer, including many clashes with a psychotic neighbor, before
returning home to a cramped apartment, where their landlords insist no animals
are allowed. Conveniently, Hobo helps the Normans reveal that the landlords are
crooks, so . . . whatever. It’s all so predictable and saccharine and vapid
that Summerdog quickly becomes
intolerable. So who cares whether this was a sincere endeavor on the part of
the filmmakers or, just as likely, a cynical effort to chase the success of Benji (1974)? Rotten is rotten, no
matter the particulars.
Summerdog: LAME
3 comments:
"A Film For The Entire Family!" - the Manson family, maybe?
When you give a beatdown to films like this, I immediately wanna see them!
So sub-Benji? UGH!
And I didn't even mention the kindly NYC homeless guy who offers lodging inside his cardboard box when one of the kids runs away... Yikes.
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