Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Leaf Arbuthnot

Theater Camp review – deeply charming and hilarious stage kid mockumentary

Note-perfect … Molly Gordon, left, and Ben Platt in a scene from Theater Camp.
Note-perfect … Molly Gordon, left, and Ben Platt in a scene from Theater Camp. Photograph: Searchlight Pictures/AP

There is a lot of bad acting, in a good way, in Molly Gordon and Nick Lieberman’s deeply charming and very funny mockumentary, set at a theatre camp in upstate New York. Gordon and Ben Platt play two teachers who met at the camp years ago and became best friends. Just as the summer’s cohort of jazz-handing theatre kids is about to descend, the camp’s redoubtable owner (Amy Sedaris) is dazzled by strobe lights and goes into a coma. This leaves the entire operation in the hands of her tech-bro son (Jimmy Tatro), who drawls that he’s “never really vibed” with the camp, but is just about bright enough to realise it’s in deep trouble with the bank.

As he tries to sort out the mess, the few staff members he hasn’t fired get on with teaching their charges how to become true thespians. One of the many pleasures of the film is that the kids in it actually look like kids, not short 24-year-old actors wearing braces; and they aren’t bratty. They all throw themselves with disarming intensity into their chosen metiers (one tiny boy already fancies himself a big-time agent), and seem generously unaware of the camp’s tattiness.

It’s a zippy 90 minutes or so, and packed with jokes. Gordon is note perfect as Rebecca-Diane, the camp’s folksy music teacher. She floats around in long cardigans and belted dresses, looking diffusely arty and compassionate, but takes her work terrifyingly seriously. “This will break you,” she warns the children in rehearsals for the end-of-camp play. “This will fully destroy you.”

Gordon is amply supported: Ayo Edebiri is enjoyably dry as a chancer who has doctored her CV to get a job leading mime and stage fighting workshops, and Nathan Lee Graham brings unexpected poignancy as an exacting dance tutor. Patti Harrison provides a gratifyingly loathsome hate-figure too, playing an investor plotting to close the camp. But the sense of peril never feels too great, which is a relief, as it might have marred this film’s loveliness and heart, its sunny soul.

  • Theater Camp is released on 25 August in UK and Irish cinemas, and on 7 September in Australian cinemas.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.