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Adventures in Babysitting

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'Adventures in Babysitting' by Chris Columbus Review: A great 80s adventure@namiks1006d
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  1. Film Review: Adventures in Babysitting (1987)@drax1542d

    (source: tmdb.org)

    Writer, director and producer Chris Columbus is one of the most successful creators of family-oriented entertainment in modern Hollywood. Already established as Spielberg’s screenwriter and shortly before re-writing television history of Christmas with Home Alone, he made directorial debut with 1987 comedy Adventures in Babysitting.

    Protagonist, played by Elisabeth Shue, is Christina “Chris” Parker, 17-year old high school student from Oak Park, Illinois who is looking forward to a date with her boyfriend Mike Todwell (played by Bradley Whitford). When he cancels the date, she decides to make some money instead and agrees to babysit Sara Anderson (played by Maia Brewton), 8-year old daughter of the couple who went to Chicago to attend the party. Sara’s 15-year old brother Brad (played by Keith Coogan) happens to have a crush on Chris, so he decides to stay at home, where he is joined by his friend Daryl Coopersmith (played by Anthony Rapp). Chris soon learns that her friend Brenda (played by Penelope Ann Miller) ran from home and got stuck at Downtown Chicago bus station. She calls her for help and Chris agrees to pick her up with her mother’s station wagon. The only problem is that Sara, Brad and Daryl insist on joining her during that trip, which she reluctantly agrees. During the drive the car suffers from flat tire and that is only the first in the series of mishaps that would force Chris and her proteges to encounter various menacing characters on the streets and get in all kind of trouble, while desperately trying to return to Andersons’ home before parents return.

    Script by David Simkins seems torn between asking audience to suspend too much disbelief in order to put protagonists into their predicament while at the same time trying to make the story and setting realistic enough to be appreciated by adult or serious viewers. Adventures in Babysitting is, therefore, at times unusually dark for what is supposed to be family-friendly comedy – protagonists encounter teenage street prostitute, witness violent altercation involving guns, become threatened by street gangs and, finally, have to deal with very nasty and determined mobsters. However, Columbus directs film well and knows when to compensate darker tones with humour. In that he is aided by diverse and talented cast. Elisabeth Shue in her first starring role is quite convincing as teenager who looks beautiful enough to make men and boys fall in love with her, yet with enough experience, ingenuity and common sense to make the right decision and protect people in her care. Shue uses a lot of charm, especially in entertaining although somewhat too fantastic scene where her character has to improvise a blues song in a night club. Maia Brewton, however, at times almost steals the show as a young girl uncharacteristically obsessed with Thor comic books, a motive well-used in a scene featuring young Vincent d’Onofrio. The rest of major cast isn’t that impressive, but it is serviceable. Penelope Ann Miller, while almost unrecognisable under glasses, is tragically underused in subplot that requires her character to act as idiot. Supporting players are much better used, especially Ron Canada as one of the mobsters.

    There was clearly a potential for this film something more than just a teen-oriented comedy. The script which features white adolescents from middle class suburbs travelling to inner city and finding black and Latino inhabitants could have been some sort of social commentary. Simkins and Columbus, however, opted for simplicity and delivered combination of humour and action, the latter providing good example of Columbus’ directorial skills. Although some scenes look annoyingly inserted to provide happy ending for protagonist and some subplots don’t exactly work, Adventures in Babysitting is mostly solid and entertaining film that could provide a lot of explanation why Columbus, Shue and many other people involved later went on to do much greater things.

    RATING: 6/10 (++)

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