The Kings of Summer: Whatever Happened to Predictability?

It's to the great detriment of The Kings of Summer that it follows the identically premised Mud by just weeks. Both films tell bittersweet coming-of-age stories about teenage friends who learn how to become men in a soon-to-be-corrupted Eden, and both are questionably embellished by a predictable teen romance, an undertone of misogyny and a plot device best described as Chekhov's snake. (Once introduced, a serpent must strike.) But whereas Mudthrough its anchoring in a rural-gritty, river-tied geography and an impressive star turn by Matthew McConaugheyfeels thoroughly cinematic, The Kings of Summer plays as though it's an extended sitcom episode, and not a very special one at that.

Sitcoms, especially since Seinfeld, have a way of getting audiences to root for jerks. The Kings of Summer attempts to pull off the same narrative trick by getting us to mistake its 15-year-old protagonist, Joe (Nick Robinson), for a scamp instead of a sullen little shit, even when he calls his widower dad's boring-but-nice girlfriend a “spider woman you found in the gutter.” Joe thinks his gruff, sarcastic father, Frank (Nick Offerman, playing a less noble variation of his Parks and Recreation character Ron Swanson), is totally ruining his life, even though we see the kid being way more of an ass than the man. So Joe builds and moves into a fantasy cabincomplete with windows, a loft and an air-hockey tablewith his more athletic best friend, Patrick (Gabriel Basso), and a nonsense-spouting ethnic cartoon named Biaggio (Moises Arias)one of the two dark-skinned, asexual characters the film prods us to laugh at. To clinch all the Urkel-era clichés (gotta catch 'em all!), Joe and Patrick run away by telling their parents they're sleeping over at each other's house.

For a while, the three teenagers live in a Boys' Life paradise, jumping into lakes, dueling with swords and sneaking off to Boston Market to retrieve dinner. But their idyll evaporates with the arrival of a popular blond girl (Erin Moriarty)do teenage boys in movies ever fall for anyone else?who unwittingly pits Joe and Patrick against each other. Joe's conflicts with his friend and his father lead to a tense yet funny, mettle-testing climax, but the ending is more cornball than Tony Danza.

Like so many comedian-driven comedies today, The Kings of Summer stitches together an occasionally off-kilter sensibility atop an Americatown-level of genericness (as in every Paul Rudd movie in the past five years). First-time director Jordan Vogt-Roberts tries to hide the seams, mostly by making the boys as witty as the standups and sitcom actors who make up the adult cast. But Vogt-Roberts is too charmed by Joe's rascality to change him very much, thus flattening his emotional arc, already barely buttressed by cardboard emotions. This makes the grown-up worldpopulated by the shticky but pleasingly tart likes of Offerman, Megan Mullally, Alison Brie, Mary Lynn Rajskub and Kumail Nanjiania lot more interesting than its pimple-faced counterpart. As nostalgic projections of boyish freedom by a couple of thirtysomething dudes, the so-called kings are good-enough jesters, but I couldn't help wishing they would shut up more and let the grown-ups talk.

 

CategoriesUncategorized

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *