The Great Outdoors is a 1988 American comedy film directed by Howard Deutch, written and produced by John Hughes, and starring Dan Aykroyd and John Candy with supporting roles done by Stephanie Faracy, Annette Bening (in her film debut), Chris Young, Lucy Deakins, and Robert Prosky. It tells the story of two families spending their week-long vacation at a lake resort in the fictional town of Pechoggin, Wisconsin with hilarious outcomes. Aykroyd, Candy, and Young reprise their roles from Hughes' previous film, She's Having a Baby.
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The Great Outdoors | |
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Directed by | Howard Deutch |
Written by | John Hughes |
Produced by | John Hughes Arne Schmidt |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ric Waite |
Edited by | Seth Flaum William D. Gordean Tom Rolf |
Music by | Thomas Newman |
Production company | Hughes Entertainment |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | $24 million |
Box office | $43.4 million |
The film was met with mixed reviews.
Chicagoan Chester "Chet" Ripley, his wife Connie, and their two sons Buckley "Buck" and Ben are spending a week vacationing at a lake resort in Pechoggin, Wisconsin, for the summer. They get their cabin from its owner Wally. All goes as planned until Connie's sister Kate, her investment broker husband Roman Craig, and their twin daughters Mara and Cara unexpectedly arrive uninvited.
Ghost stories after the family BBQ include one of a man-eating grizzly bear that Chet met directly when he was younger. Chet says that while he and Connie were honeymooning at the same lake, he was attacked by a giant grizzly bear. When he fired at it with a shotgun, the buckshot shaved the hair off the top of the bear's head and from then on, it was known as the "Bald-Headed Bear" of Clare County.
After Roman pulls Chet around the lake on an impromptu water ski ride with his rented speedboat, tensions between the families erupt. Chet is ready to pack up and go home, even as his teenage son Buck tries to romance a local girl Cammie. The budding romance goes well until Chet is challenged to eat a 96-ounce steak called "the Old 96'er" at a family dinner which causes Buck to break their date. Buck tries to apologize to Cammie for being late, but Cammie refuses to speak to him.
Connie and Kate bond at a local bar when the conversation drifts to Kate's feelings of loneliness with Roman despite their wealth. Later, just at the peak of tension between families, Roman tells of the time at his and Kate's wedding when he overheard a conversation between Chet and their father-in-law describing how they think Roman is a crooked businessman. Roman then tells Chet why he came up to visit: to offer Chet a $25,000 investment opportunity. Feeling guilty from the wedding story, Chet is initially reluctant, but eventually agrees to write Roman a check for the whole amount.
The families say their goodbyes and Roman and his family head back to Chicago. On the car ride home, Kate praises Roman for including Chet in the investment, noting that $25,000 is a lot of money for Chet's family to part with. Now feeling guilty himself, Roman halts the car and returns to the cabin.
Upon his return, Roman confesses that the story about the wedding conversation never happened and that he is broke from some failed investments. His true intention for coming up to the lake was to solicit money from Chet to financially recover.
During a thunderstorm, Kate discovers the twins have gone missing. Chet and Roman find them at the bottom of an old mine shaft, but the claustrophobic Roman is reluctant to descend into the tiny space. After some encouragement from Chet, Roman reluctantly climbs down into the mine, while Chet searches for a rope to pull them out. Upon realizing that the mine is stocked with old dynamite, Roman takes his daughters and escapes the shaft on his own.
Upon returning with the rope, Chet is horrified to discover the "Bald-Headed Bear" lurking in the mine. It chases him back to the cabin, smashes through the door, and rampages through the house. Wally bursts in with a loaded shotgun lamp while Roman tries to hold off the animal with a fireplace poker and an oar. Chet takes the shotgun lamp and shoots the bear, blowing the fur off its rear. Roaring in pain, the bear runs out of the house making painful noises.
The next morning, the families part on amicable terms. Cammie accepts Buck's apologies and they end their brief romance. When Chet wonders what Roman meant by he'll see him soon, Connie states that she invited the Craigs to stay with them until they can recover. The Ripleys return to Chicago as Chet plans to beat Roman to their house first.
During the credits, a deleted scene shows Chet, Connie, Roman, Kate, and Wally in a bar dancing to "Land of a Thousand Dances".
In a post-credits scene, three members of the raccoon family (who rummaged through the trash cans throughout the film) talk in their language about "Jody" sitting in the lake. One of them learns about what happened and another one states that she is now "bald on both ends".
Additional voices by Catherine Battistone, Bill Capizzi, Steve Kramer, Luisa Leschin, Wendy Oates, Thomas White, Tom Williams, and Marcia Wolf.
The film was shot on location in Bass Lake, California, a small resort town near Sierra National Forest over three weeks in October 1987.[1] Ducey's Bass Lake Lodge, a rustic 1940s resort, was featured as Wally and Juanita's Perk's Pine Lodge. The Loon's Nest vacation cabin, built on the backlot at Universal Studios,[2] was designed to match the style of Ducey's existing cabins.
The film was shot under the working title "Big Country", but was changed to avoid confusion with Big which was due to come out at the same time.[3]
In the original John Hughes script, Roman's redemption came through a daring rescue of his twin girls who had caught a giant fish that towed them around the lake in a small rowboat. A mechanical fish was built for the film. But when it could not be made to work correctly, the script was re-written around the legend of the bald-headed bear and the chase in the final act.[4]
The Great Outdoors earned a mixed response from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a rating of 41% from 17 reviews, with an average rating of 4.9/10.[5] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 24 out of 100 based on 10 reviews, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews."[6] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[7]
In her review in The New York Times, Janet Maslin reported that the film did not have enough collective energy to light a campfire.[8] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called the film as "a crass, blah comedy about summer vacation perils" and said he was surprised the film got made at all. He described the end credits sequence where Aykroyd and Candy dance to Wilson Pickett's "Land of a Thousand Dances" as the only genuine fun and energy in the entire film.[9] "Imagine that it's raining cats and dogs and you're locked in a north woods cabin for weeks with the people you like least, and you'll pretty much have a feel for what it's like to sit through this movie," said Hal Hinson of The Washington Post.[10]
The film grossed $6,121,115 in its opening weekend and ended up with a North American domestic box office gross of $41,455,230, and a worldwide gross of $43,455,230.[11][12]
A soundtrack for the film was released by Atlantic Records in 1988 and featured many of the songs used in the film.
Before The Great Outdoors appeared in theaters, Dan Aykroyd, John Candy, and Chris Young portrayed their roles during the end credits of She's Having a Baby where they are among the people that pitch the idea names for the baby son of Jake and Kristy.[13]
On April 27, 2017, Universal Pictures announced that a reboot of the film starring Kevin Hart and produced by Michael De Luca was in development.[14]
In a November 2, 2021 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Aykroyd said that he was working on a sequel with Deutch titled The Great Outlaws that would "bring back Roman as a Ponzi scheme guy who victimizes a federal agent." In the interview, Aykroyd also said that he was "looking for the Candy figure" to cast in the film.[15]
Films directed by Howard Deutch | |
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