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Monday, June 29, 2015

Ancient Cult Files #7 -- Recess: School's Out

   Yes, I'm doing a Disney film. But the status of cult doesn't always pertain to the production studio that it was created by; a media's status of cult is defined by its loyal fan-base long after its initial release, and this film certainly has that. Walt Disney Studios produces good films that deserve praise, but they are often times are overly praised due to the advertisement budget and contracts with critics that Disney has acquired over the years. 
   It is a seasoned mega-corporation through and through, but sometimes they overlook some of their best work.
   Recess: School's Out was released in 2001 and was based off the hit television series of the same name. The show followed a friend group made up of T.J. (the scheming, cool boy), Vince (an athletic one), Spinelli (real name Ashley, a tough girl), Mikey (the huge but docile performing artist), Gretchen (the science prodigy), and Gus (a regimented army child). The series portrayed their navigation of academic, social and personal problems throughout the time spent in their recess play period at school.
   The story begins with the last recess of the school year and the gang pulls one last large prank; Spinelli, Vince, Gus, and Mikey catapulting stolen ice cream from the cafeteria onto the playground and T.J. imitating Principle Prickly with a voice-over machine provided by Gretchen making wise cracks about the school's administration and Prickly himself. The real administrator cuts the laughter short and takes T.J. to his office while the other children go back to their classrooms for their final period of 4th grade. Prickly is furious at T.J. but cannot punish him since it is the last day of school.
   With the ringing of the final bell, both the staff and students
School's out!
at Third Street Elementary are joyous over the beginning of summer. T.J. had already planned out the activities he and his friends will get to do, but is broken-hearted to find out that all of them are

going to various camps around the state to work on their skills;
Vince is going to baseball camp, Gretchen to space camp, Spinelli to wrestling camp, Mikey to a musical theater camp, and Gus to a military camp. All his friends say that they need these camps to prepare for their futures and leave on buses the next morning. T.J. rides about town doing the activities he meant to do with the gang in a depressed manner, but also rides by the school, where he sees unfamiliar personnel entering the school and is chased off by hostile security guards. He investigates further, and is horrified to see scientists testing some sort of ray-gun beam on a money safe, lifting it high off the ground. He rushes back to his house and tell his parents what he saw, but they dismiss it as a joke. He then tries the police and they give him the same reaction.
An unlikely ally
   Having no one else to turn to, he finds Principle Prickly at a local golf course and tries convinces him to come and check out the school. Prickly is angered to be removed from his vacation, but decides to go to the school with T.J. Upon their arrival, all the security guards are gone and everything appears normal. However, when Prickly tries to unlock the door, he is electrocuted by a green current and is de-materialized through the door. 
   Knowing now that something is definitely not right, T.J. convinces his older sister Becky (by threatening to post her diary on the internet) to help him in pulling his other friends out of their camps to come investigate the invaders of their school. Once
The tractor beam's blinding ray
he has rounded the gang up, they sneak onto the school grounds at night and steal a crate being transported into the building. However, it contains fairly mundane information; test scores, weather maps, and information about the school. His friends then turn on T.J., believing that he made up the story to bring them back from camp. However, just as they are about to leave, a larger version of the tractor beam T.J. saw being tested earlier, comes out of the school's roof and fires into the sky. It then retracts, and the children are left shocked, especially Mikey who proceeds to faint.
   The other five now believe T.J. and agree to help him keep an eye on the activities at the school with other kids covering for them at night and Becky driving them to and from camp during the day. During one of their stake-outs in T.J.'s tree house, the gang sadly realize
while hanging out in good spirits that their summers together are numbered, much to Gus's despair since this is his first summer with the gang. They lift each other's spirits by singing an old song that they learned together years before.
Phillium explaining something passionately
   While the others are away at camp, T.J. finds Principle Prickly's golf pants in the school's dumpster and sees one of the security guards pretending to be Prickly and going home to his wife every evening. This makes it clear that he is being held hostage in the school. That night, the gang break into the school to discover once and for all what is happening. They discover that their auditorium has been converted into a scientific laboratory for the tractor beam, and the man behind is Phillium Benedict (who on the television in the background earlier in the film was fired from being the U.S. Secretary of Education). The kids are discovered and attempt to flee, but T.J. is captured by the endless personnel (including ninjas) Phillium seems to have on the property. He is put in with Prickly, who reveals that Phillium once was his colleague and the principle of 3rd Street Elementary, but was removed for trying to get rid of recess, the same reason he was removed from his position in the federal government. Phillium then reveals his full plan to the two; he plans to use the tractor beam to move the moon's orbit closer to the earth, which will turn summers into winter-like periods, thus
Phillium's evil plan
forcing children to study instead of playing all summer and will improve test scores. Seeing that the former cabinet member is off his rocker, it's left up to Prickly, T.J. and the gang to save summer vacation.

   Recess: School's Out was both a financial and critical success and is fondly remembered by fans of the television series. James Woods voices Phillium and the voice actors from the show all were in the project as well. 
   The film has faded from memory for the most part, which I consider a loss. It gives a very interesting perspective of how education should be handled, questioning whether testing should be pushed aside to give students the chance to be children, and perhaps that is the actual recipe for quality citizens. It is a bit convoluted with the addition of ninjas, tractor beams, and the villain himself (though one could argue he's gone insane), but it is still geared towards children, so some imagination can be forgiven. The 1960's soundtrack used is amazing to convey the struggle between and underdog and the authority.
   It isn't completely necessary to watch the series before this film since the characters are fairly self-explanatory, though the show is quite good as well.
   Disney's buried treasure may not be as flashy as Frozen or Big Hero 6, but it gives a hopeful and relatable message about growing up and savoring childhood.
   Three and three-fourths of a star, check it out!


The Disney logo at the beginning of the film.

   

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