Meatballs – Special Edition (DVD-Video)
Picture:
B- Sound: C+ Extras: C+ Film: B-
Bill Murray had been in many feature films, but when Ivan Reitman’s Meatballs arrived in 1979, Murray was
red hot thanks to helping to put Saturday
Night Live on the map and the ads claimed the film “introduced” him. Well, maybe as a lead. Following the cycle of teen comedies that Animal House (reviewed on HD-DVD
elsewhere on this site) made possible, it was a huge hit and Murray continued
his ways as a comic legend.
The film
has him running a summer camp, so you know this will not be the stuffy
kind. The film has its peer pressure and
cruel moments, then has its broad comedy moments, but the Daniel Goldman
screenplay somehow keeps it all balanced.
Murray often steals the show, but there are other good character actor
performances and the film introduced Chris Makepiece, who soon went on to
co-star in the enduring, underrated My
Bodyguard.
Instead
of being just a time capsule of the moment, the film is a raw comedy that is
often honest about the people it portrays, while keeping the comedy going as Caddyshack (also reviewed on HD-DVD
elsewhere on this site, but available in Blu-ray as well) and a few other
memorable comedies would be before the blockbuster mentality (as in Reitman’s Ghostbusters) killed these little
comedies that could.
Helping
it is that adults often did not like it, validating it all the more, though few
give it credit for its Canadian comic sensibilities, an influence that helped
Hollywood comedies more than hurt them.
It could almost be argued that Meatballs
is a minor comedy classic, but even if you totally can’t go that far, people
still talk about it and for all the reasons they would for good comedies. That it is better than most we’ve seen lately
speaks for itself.
The
anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image is from a new digital High Definition
master that Reitman is said to have supervised.
Though some shots do not look as good as others, the film looks the best
it has looked since its original theatrical release. Sony is also supposed to issue a Blu-ray when
this DVD arrives and if we get one, we’ll compare the two. The Dolby Digital 5.1 tries to spread out the
old monophonic sound, but the Dolby 2.0 actually sounds a bit better. The combination with either soundtrack is
fine.
Extras
include a feature length audio commentary by Reitman and writer/producer
Goldman and a making of documentary split in three sections. One may ask where the promotional materials
are, but as another studio’s logo is at the beginning, they likely own that,
but fans should still be very satisfied with what they get here.
By the
way, give or take the lame sequels that followed, this and the underrated Little Darlings (1980) are the last
major films about a summer camp where the guests were not annihilated in a
violent, brutal manner. Who knew it was
the end of an era.
- Nicholas Sheffo