Jonathan Taylor Thomas, Jamey Sheridan, Devon Sawa, Scott
Bairstow, Frances Fisher. (PG, 107 min.)
Suggested alternate title: The Women Don't Know, But the Little Boys Understand.
This second feature by William Dear (Angels in the Outfield) has its flaws, but as
an example of adolescent male fantasies writ large it approaches brilliance. Broadly
based on true boyhood experiences of award-winning nature documentarian Mark Stouffer
(played here by Devon Sawa), Wild America chronicles a summer in the late Sixties
when he and brothers Marshall (Jonathan Taylor Thomas of the Home Improvement TV
series) and Marty (Scott Bairstow) spent several weeks touring the country and filming
threatened animal species in their natural habitats. Their adventures include life-threatening
encounters with grizzly bears, gators, moose, whitewater rapids, army missiles, and
stampeding wild horses. Down-time is spent frolicking with nubile hippie girls and
reading ghastly animal-attack stories around the campfire. For young guy viewers
who revere the holy trinity of speed, chaos, and danger, these doughty lads will
register as instant soulmates. Because of the calculatedly gender-targeted nature
of these mythic exploits, girls may find less of interest here, though the brothers'
good looks and roguish charm might compensate to some degree. Safety-obsessed parents
are best advised to skip this movie altogether. The scene in which preteen Marshall
flies a vintage airplane after only verbal instruction would suffice in itself to
fill the theatre with the popcorn crackle of rupturing cerebral arteries. Though
rowdy adventure is Wild America's selling point it also -- regrettably -- includes
gratuitous sops to family-values concerns. The boys' outing thus becomes their symbolic
coming of age, observed with mingled respect and incomprehension by their rock-jawed,
truck-driving father (Jamey Sheridan, in a disappointingly one-dimensional performance).
Their mother, a domestic diplomat who creatively resolves head-butting clashes among
the home's young and old bulls, is a rather more interesting character thanks to
the ability of Frances Fisher (Unforgiven, Female Perversions) to manufacture nuances
in her traditional June Allyson hausfrau role. In the end, I believe, it's a mistake
to devote a large portion of the film to insipid, conventional family drama and contrived
suspense over the community's response to the boys' film. These elements feel superfluous
and half-baked. Worse, they detract from the heady forward rush of the story and
the filmmakers' sure feel for the intense significance of that moment when young
men take their first leaps from the nest. Objections aside, though, Wild America
is a high-spirited, wholesome, raucously humorous journey to young dude heaven. Highly
recommended for the SegaGenesis jocks in your household.
3.0 stars
--Russell Smith
Full Length Reviews
Wild America 
Capsule Reviews
Wild America 
Wild America 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Warriors of Virtue 
Small Soldiers 
Mighty Joe Young 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by William Dear at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|