Daddy Day Camp

  • Cuba Gooding Jr.: Charlie Hinton
  • Lochlyn Munro: Lance Warner
  • Richard Gant: Colonel Buck Hinton
  • Tamala Jones: Kim Hinton
  • Paul Rae Phil Ryerson
  • Josh McLerran: Dale
  • Spencir Bridges: Ben Hinton
  • Brian Doyle - Murray: Uncle Morty
  • Dallin Boyce: Max Ryerson
  • Telise Galanis: Juliette
  • Taggart Hurtubise: Carl
  • Molly Jepson: Becca
  • Tad D' Agostino: Robert
  • Tyger Rawlings: Billy West
  • Talon G. Ackerman: Jack

Daddy Day 2: Day Camp (AKA: Daddy Day Camp ) is a comedy film from 2007, directed by Fred Savage with Cuba Gooding Jr. in the lead role. It is the sequel to the film Daddy Day from the year 2003.

Action

After Charlie Hinton and Phil Ryerson were successful in childcare with Daddy Day Care, Charlie buys the dilapidated Camp Driftwood one to make it to a successful Daddy Day Camp. He harbors an old rivalry located near Camp Canola and its operator Lance Warner, against whom he had lost in his youth at a camp Olympics. The former operators of Camp Driftwood goodbye, shortly after Charlie has involved without informing on holiday, him of the debt to the bank that has the camp. When the bank representatives appears to garnishment, it can Charlie persuade just a time: He receives a month's time and must have at least 30 children as guests. After a few setbacks, he reluctantly calls his father, Colonel Buck Hinton to help. Together, they manage with the remaining children to win at the Camp Olympics against Camp Canola what many parents want their children to Camp Canola out and enroll in the successful Camp Charlie, so the camp was saved from foreclosure.

Background

  • The film was shot entirely in Utah.
  • The production cost was estimated at 6 million U.S. dollars.
  • The film opened in theaters in the USA on 8 August 2007 and in German cinemas on 15 November 2007.
  • In the cinema of the United States, the film grossed a 13 million U.S. dollar, and about 5 million U.S. dollars in the other countries.

Reviews

John Anderson wrote in the journal Variety of 6 August 2007, the film suffers from all the " almost classical" weaknesses of the movie sequels. The plot reusing the elements of the original film, which would act as a sitcom ( "story did Essentially recycles the original 's sitcomish elements" ). No one seemed to have something else sought as easily earned Gage ("no one was really in it for anything but a quick payday ").

Will Crain wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle of 8 August 2007, the sequel to the first film was " formulaic ". It was sad, the talented Oscar winner Cuba Gooding Jr. "reduced" in the footsteps of Eddie Murphy to see, but Gooding doing his best from what the film will give him ( "It's a bit sad to see this talented, Oscar -winning actor Reduced to taking Murphy's cast-off parts, but Gooding does fine with what the movie gives him " ). The film was intended for viewers under 13.

The lexicon of the International film proclaims: " Anything that can go wrong goes wrong [Note: refers not to the act ] - including almost all of these gags comedy. Not more than a loveless, poorly staged revue with überkandidelten performers. "

Awards

  • The film won the Golden Raspberry negative award 2008 in the category Worst Prequel or sequel.
  • In four other categories of film for a Razzie 2008 nominees: Worst Picture, Worst Screenplay, Worst Director Fred Savage and Cuba Gooding Jr. as Worst Actor.
  • The children's ensemble was nominated for a Young Artist Award in 2008.
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