Are You Ready For The Summer (To End)?
Our retrospective on the career of Bill Murray continues with a look at Meatballs.
With Oscar heading off to school and our camping gear slowly disappearing into the attic, I
was easy prey when I spotted the DVD for $10.
Meatballs was the second entry in a series of Ivan Reitman-Harold Ramis
collaborations, including Animal House, Stripes, and Ghostbusters. It
was also the first Bill Murray vehicle, yet it transcends the type-casting that dogged Murray
over his first decade in filmmaking. Murrays early characters were typically
slackers/scoundrels that hammed it up and then redeemed themselves in the final act. While
Murrays Tripper in Meatballs has many clownish moments, he is in no need of
redemption; for everyone around him, he is the source of wisdom (although he needs to humbly and
happily earn the favors of the formidable Roxanne). The film focuses on Trippers
patronage of Wudy the Wabbit*, but in fact Tripper is responsible
for the welfare of everyone at Camp NorthStar; he is the most grown-up person in the film.
In hindsight, it is clear that Murray had always been instinctively aware of
the delicate balance between comedy and gravity, and that his more recent triumphs are best
understood as the fruition of his talents. But it neither Murrays performance nor his
transcendence of the limitations of the (pre-)teen comedy genre that endears Meatballs to
me. Proximally, while I never saw it in the theaters (my family moved from Tucson to
Seattle in the summer of 1979, a rather traumatic displacement for me), I must have seen it a
couple dozen times on Showtime, surpassed perhaps only by my uncounted viewings of Star Trek
II: The Wrath of (Sili)Khan.
Despite not having seen the film in Tucson, for me Meatballs very
specifically evokes what it was like to be ten years old and alone, whether away at camp,
attending a new school, or moving to a new city. Ten is an age when one learns that there
are different kinds of friends, and that it pays to be selective. For many kids, it is also
when they are first exposed to older teenagers who are not simply surrogate parents but
confidants who will give them the inside skinny on growing up. For all their foibles,
heedless hair, and unfortunate clothing, the counselors-in-training at Camp NorthStar look
exactly like the teenagers I looked up to in 1978-9. The film is also severely dated
by the wretched montage-ballads, but I must confess that these days, when confronted by images of
plastic aviator glasses and Castro-district-shorts set to swoony lyrics, there is no other word
to describe my reaction than nostalgia.
Of course, I never attended anything like Camp NorthStar; who sends their kids
away for the entire summer? These are supposed to be the poor kids? I went to
camp a week at a time, both in the Chiricahua Mountains and on the shores of Puget Sound, at most
twice but usually once in a single summer. It was church camp, but that didnt seem to
make a large difference to either the campers or the counselors appointed to watch over us.
Even after such a short duration, there were always tears on the last day (which returned unbidden
last month when we picked Oscar up from his day care for the last time).
I suppose Im obliged to make the Old Fart observation that they
dont make movies like Meatballs anymore. A year after it was released, Jason
Vorhees hit the theaters and forever changed the way cinema regards summer camp. More
significantly, teen comedies are now either too ironic or too gross to pause to celebrate the
fleeting fellowship between 17-year-olds who give up part of their precious summer to adjudicate
pillow fights between 8-year-olds. "If you make one good friend a summer, youre
doing pretty well." Howd you make out this summer?. (Thu 08 Sep 2005, 18.32 PDT) @ #
* Meatballs also inaugurated my ill-starred identification
with Chris Makepeace, as I can trace my habit of early rising to Rudys magical
discovery of Trippers jogging regimen. This fascination would result in a latent
anti-urbanism after My Bodyguard, and end in temple-pounding tears with Mazes and
Monsters.