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Meatballs

1979

Action / Comedy

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Bill Murray Photo
Bill Murray as Tripper
Matt Craven Photo
Matt Craven as Hardware
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
796.42 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S ...
1.5 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Woodyanders8 / 10

A delightfully sprightly and zany hoot

Wildman head counselor Tripper Harrison (Bill Murray in peak nutty form in his first lead role) presides over the various wacky hi-jinks at North Star summercamp. Tripper befriends sad and lonely misfit kid Rudy (a nice and affecting performance by Chris Makepeace). Director Ivan Reitman relates the amusingly off the wall comic vignettes at a ceaseless snappy pace and maintains an engagingly good-natured tone throughout. This film astutely nails the breezy'n'breezy essence of summer: making friends, first love, pulling pranks, competing in sports with a rival camp, campfire singalongs, and, of course, the inevitable scary urban legend about the escaped psycho killer with the hook hand. The sense of gleefully raucous fun this picture generates is positively infectious. Moreover, the humor is always goofy and occasionally gross, but never too nasty or mean-spirited. Best of all, there's a winning surplus of pure heart to go along with said humor (the warm relationship between Tripper and Rudy in particular is genuinely touching). The cast have an obvious ball playing their likable characters: Murray's gloriously gonzo and galvanizing presence keeps things constantly humming (his crazy PA announcements are absolutely sidesplitting),plus there are sound contributions from Harvey Atkin as hapless camp owner Morty, Kate Lynch as Tripper's sassy old flame Roxanne, Russ Banham as the amiable Crockett, Kristine DeBell as the sweet, foxy A.L., Sarah Torgov as the feisty Candace, Jack Blum as klutzy bespectacled nerd Spaz, Keith Knight as tubby slob Larry Finkelstein, Cindy Girling as the fetching Wendy, and Matt Craven as the hip Hardware. Donald Wilder's cinematography gives the movie an attractive sunny look and makes nifty use of wipes. Elmer Bernstein's lively and melodic score likewise does the trick. A real riot.

Reviewed by Scarecrow-888 / 10

Meatballs

Camp North Star and it's Camp counselor extraordinaire, Tripper Harrison(Bill Murray)sure would like to end a decades long losing streak to rival Camp Mohawk, an ivy league type place where only the wealthy kids can attend. Meanwhile, we watch as Tripper tries his hand at love when he flirts aimlessly with fellow female counselor Roxanne(Kate Lynch)as other teen counselors pair up and also fall head-over-heels. The film comes to head at the Camp Olympiad as the rivals square off in competitive athletic contests with Tripper almost realizing their doomed to fail yet another year. The film also shows the growing bond between Tripper and a quietly lonely, puppy-dog eyed Rudy(Chris Makepeace of "Vamp" fame),whose dad is often away all the time. Rudy doesn't seem to fit in with the other kids his age and he seems to spend most of his time either jogging in the mornings with Tripper or taking his peanuts at Blackjack. The film mostly contains hi-jinx of fellow teen camp counselors cutting up and goofing around.

You have hottie counselors, total nerd Spaz(Jack Blum)with his taped glasses and bad acne, beak-nosed "Hardware"(Matt Craven)who likes to blow things up, fat kid Fink(Keith Knight) who is often stuffing his face, amongst others in the film. There's a basketball game where poor Spaz can barely bounce the ball against rival Camp Mohawk much less shoot an accurate shot with poor Fink tossing underhanded, between-his-knees fly-balls that sail over the back-board. There's camp fire coupling(with a spirited scary tale by Tripper about a hook-handed killer)and boys drooling over the lovely ladies.

Yes, I know it's desperate at times trying to squeeze out every laugh it can and occasionally indulges in lapses of sentimentality(such as the scenes with a sad Makepeace and Murray),but just as much as this recent viewing, I found myself giggling away. I'm licked and just can't help loving this. It's a summer camp movie through and through which simply wants to entertain you. I can't explain, or reinforce enough, the overwhelming joy that floods forth when I see a sleepy Murray's hand reach from the covers for the alarm clock that's piercing loudly pronouncing a summer camp movie is about to begin. His intercom jokes are especially amusing. But, the flick is, let's be honest, a series of comic vignettes with Murray dead-panning endlessly..not that there's anything wrong with that. The film, though, couldn't quite survive without him, could it? Hard to even think of this movie without Murray in the lead. It's a happier time and I think nostalgia of that summer camp experience plays quite a hand in why we grown-ups still connect with "Meatballs" warmly. And, poor Morty(Harvey Atkin),the camp head who so badly wants things to run smooth, and to beat Camp Mohawk for a change, is the constant source of Tripper and gang's amusement as they often play gags on him..especially when he's sleeping on his bed! Great enthusiastic cast who seem to be having as much as us.

Reviewed by MartinHafer6 / 10

Strictly for the 12-16 crowd.

"Meatballs" is Bill Murry's first starring film and it did incredibly well at the box office...making about 35-40 times more than it cost to make! I never saw it back in the day, but probably should have as I was 15...the perfect age for the movie. Now, at 55, I'm too old...not nearly the target audience for the picture. And, I must add, that I've seen very few films with such a narrow age range that would enjoy the movie--probably only about 12-16. Older folks won't be all that impressed and younger ones probably won't understand a lot of the innuendos.

The film is nearly plotless and follows a bunch of kids at Camp Northstar. And, on occasion, the camp battles its rich and spoiled neighboring summer camp. Some of the kids seem like real ones...but several are also one-dimensional and lazy stereotypes--such as 'Spaz' (the super-nerdy kid with tape all over his glasses) and the fat kid who walks around with a cooler filled with candy and other snacks.

Some of this film is funny...some is disturbing. The funny mostly would appeal to younger folks and most adults would simply stare at the screen and wonder why they're watching it in the first place. The disturbing is both intentional and unintentional. The intentionally distubing stuff involves teen sexuality...though the film is not inappropriate THAT often...just occasionally. The unintentional stuff is because times have changed. Nice-guy Tripper (Murray) befriends a lonely 12 year-old (Chris Makepeace) and they spend a ton of time alone together...which was meant to be sweet. But today with a greater awareness of pedophilia, I could see people raising eyebrows. Sad.

Overall, a film with only a few laughs but sure to please the right age group...and I'd rate it higher for them. All others....well, Murray has done many other wonderful films which should appeal to you much more.

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