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Summer Rental is a 1985 American comedy film directed by Carl Reiner, written by Mark Reisman and Jeremy Stevens, and starring John Candy and Richard Crenna. It tells the story of an overworked air traffic controller who is put on a five weeks' paid leave and takes his family to the resort town of Citrus Cove, Florida with different comical results. An original music score was composed for the film by Alan Silvestri. The film was released on August 9, 1985, by Paramount Pictures.[2][3]

Summer Rental
Theatrical release poster
Directed byCarl Reiner
Written byMark Reisman
Jeremy Stevens
Produced byGeorge Shapiro
Starring
CinematographyRic Waite
Edited byBud Molin
Music byAlan Silvestri
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • August 9, 1985 (1985-08-09)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$24,689,703 (US)[1]

The film was met with negative reviews.


Plot


Overworked air traffic controller Jack Chester is given five weeks' paid leave by his supervisor Hal after nearly causing a mid-air collision on the job and having an outburst over what turned out to be a fly covering a radar blip. He uses this time off to take his wife Sandy, children Jennifer, Bobby, and Laurie, and pet dog Archie on a summer vacation from the Atlanta area to the Gulf Coast resort town of Citrus Cove, Florida, where they are beset by a barrage of problems.

First, they are bumped out of the front of the line of an upscale seafood restaurant in favor of arrogant local sailing champion Al Pellet. They end up dining at The Barnacle run by a local saloon keeper named Richard Scully with a pirate's mentality. Later, the family learns that they misread the address and moved into the wrong house as Dan Gardner, the real owner, and his family arrive home and help them rectify the address error. They end up at the real address which turns out to be a decrepit hut with public access path on the property to the beach. Later, Jack suffers a leg injury sailing with Bobby and colliding with Al's sailboat that prevents him from spending time with his family who befriend Don Moore and his son Gregg at the movie theater. After befriending their neighbors Vicki and Ed Sanders, Chester later befriends Richard who teaches him how to run a sailboat.

Later, Jack again locks horns with Al, who turns out to be the new owner of the dubious house after the previous landlord died, having been sent to the hospital earlier. Jack gives Al the check for $1,000 to cover the rent for the next two weeks, but Al tears up the check and orders the Chesters to leave when the first two weeks expire, threatening premature personal eviction. To avoid this, Jack challenges Al to a race at the upcoming Citrus Cove Regatta: if Al wins, Jack will pay him the $1,000 rent and take his family home. if Jack wins, he keeps the money and earns the right to stay in the house for the next two weeks rent-free. Al scoffs at the notion that Jack could defeat him in a race, but accepts the challenge. However, Jack hasn't sailed for many years and doesn't even have a boat. Richard Scully volunteers to help him on both counts with help from his crew. The bored Chesters come to life by helping Jack make his new vessel seaworthy with help from the Sanders.

On the day of the Citrus Cove Regatta, the Moores watch over Archie while the Sanders watch the race. This motley crew is initially no match for Al or the other competitors, but a strong breeze, a large pair of pants, and throwing out useless items enable Jack to achieve a victory at sea.


Cast



Production


Filming took around nine weeks, from March 18 to May 15, 1985, with principal photography starting in St. Petersburg and St. Pete Beach, Florida, on March 18 for seven weeks before moving to Atlanta.[4]

The film was based on a summer holiday taken by Bernie Brillstein when he rented a house at the beach in Southern California. "I have five children and I weigh 240 pounds," said Brillstein. "Being heavy in California is not a terrific thing. Being heavy on the beach is worse. The house on the left was occupied by two elderly sisters, one of whom had a 6-foot-4 inch mentally challenged son who was out of Arsenic and Old Lace. The house on the right was out of Death in Venice, occupied by a chic group of homosexuals who had 28 inch waists and wore peach sweaters."[5]

It became a starring vehicle for John Candy. Director Carl Reiner said "Like a small, beautiful painting in a large frame, John is a handsome guy in a larger frame than is necessary."[5] The film was developed at Paramount by the team of Barry Diller, Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg. They all ended up leaving the studio before the film was made.[6][7] Brillstein expected the film to be cancelled. However, Paramount's new studio president Ned Tanen greenlit the film. "It was quite a good script, and we had no product," said Tanen. "There was a vacant spot of about six months on our release schedule. When all the geniuses are through, that's as good a reason as any to make a movie."[5]

Candy and Reiner got along so well that they planned to make another film together at Paramount, titled The Last Holiday, but it never was made.[5] In a 1986 interview, Candy stated he was paid $800,000 for the role.[8]


Locations


Summer Rental was filmed in St. Pete Beach, near St. Petersburg, Florida.[9] Several local landmarks can be seen throughout the movie, including the St. Petersburg Pier during the final leg of the Regatta. Other landmarks include the old drawbridge on US19/I-275 north of the old Sunshine Skyway as well as shots of Egmont Key in the distance.

The air traffic control, radar room scene was filmed on location at the Atlanta Air Route Traffic Control Center (ZTL) in Hampton, Georgia.[10]


Music


Jimmy Buffett's "Turning Around" plays during the closing credits. It is also played when the Chesters are fixing their boat, the Barnacle. The soundtrack is the only legitimate release of the song.

In 2014, Alan Silvestri's score was released on a limited edition album by Quartet Records, twinned with his score for the 1987 film Critical Condition.


Release


Summer Rental was released in the United States on August 9, 1985, and was Candy’s first starring role in a feature film.[11]


Home media


The film originally was released in the United States by Paramount on DVD in April 2001 on widescreen with a theatrical trailer as the sole special feature. It was reissued on DVD three more times.[12] The United Kingdom released it on DVD in 2004 with the same extra feature.[13]


Reception



Box office


Summer Rental opened in 1,584 theatres on August 9, 1985 with a domestic total of $24.7 million.[1]

In the United States and Canada, it made $5,754,259 in its first weekend, ranking second at the box office. On its second weekend, it grossed $3,708,812 in 1,595 theaters, a 35% decrease over the previous week, ranking sixth. By the third weekend, it made $2.3 million and on its fourth $1.9 million over Labor Day weekend, ranking eleventh. On the fifth weekend, it made over $1 million for a box-office total of $21,579,838. It made another $2.8 million on its sixth and final weekend, with an increase of 171%, climbing to second place behind Back to the Future.[1]


Critical response


The film received negative reviews from critics, and holds a 17% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 18 reviews.[14]


References


  1. "Summer Rental". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  2. Maslin, Janet (1985-08-09). "Movie Review - Summer Rental - FILM: 'SUMMER RENTAL,' DIRECTED BY CARL REINER". NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  3. "Summer Rental (1985) - Overview". TCM.com. Retrieved 2015-04-30.
  4. "Summer Rental (1985)". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  5. A ghostly film that's no 'kiddie movie.' Aljean Harmetz New York Times 9 Aug 1985: C16.
  6. Paramount Appoints New Production Chief by ALJEAN HARMETZ New York Times 16 Apr 1985: C15.
  7. Too Many Movies and Too Few Successes Result in Poor Summer for Film Industry by LAURA LANDRO Wall Street Journal 2 Aug 1985: 15.
  8. Siskel, Gene (March 30, 1986). "SOUR MOVIES KEEP CANDY JUST SHORT OF SWEET SUCCESS". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  9. "Summer Rental (1985)". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  10. "Summer Rental (1985)". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  11. "Summer Rental (1985)". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  12. "Summer Rental (1985) Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  13. "Summer Rental (1985) Blu-ray United Kingdom". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
  14. "Summer Rental". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 14, 2020.





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