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The
Zoo Gang
(1985)
Director: John Watson & Pan Densham
Cast: Jackie Earle Haley, Eric Gurry, Tiffany Helm
When I look far back, at my life when I was a
young 'un, I realize that I had a childhood that
was much more fortunate than what many other
people around the world experienced when they
were young. There was a roof over my head, three
square meals a day, and I got to go to school so
I could better myself for eventual adulthood.
There were also pleasant bonuses along the way
such as family vacations, television, and
computers/video games. But when I look back at
those years, I see that even while I was getting
all of that stuff and more, part of me was still
not satisfied. I wanted more. Now, before you
label me as greedy, I think I should point out
that probably you, dear reader, as a child
wanted a lot more than what you were getting, no
matter how rosy your childhood was. It's human
nature to desire to have the best life possible.
Anyway, I think I better explain the kind of
stuff I really desired while growing up,
starting first with the years before I was a
teenager. During that period when I was growing
up, I watched a lot of television, and shows
that focused on youths like Happy Days
made an impact on me. When I was not wondering
why the Fonz was spending all that time hanging
around teenagers instead of people that were
closer to his age, I observed Richie and his
friends frequently doing stuff out of the house,
like hanging out at Arnold's. Comic books made
an impact on me as well, specifically Archie
comic books. Those youths in the comics did a
lot of stuff out of their houses, like hanging
out at Pop's or shopping downtown.
Why was I jealous of these youths I observed
on TV or in comic books? Because they were all
able to get out of the house and go to places
(without parents) to amuse themselves. I was not
so lucky as a child. I lived in what must have
been the most boring neighborhood in North
America. There were no kids my age to hang out
with in my neighborhood, for one thing. Plus,
the house that I lived in was far, far away from
anything that would amuse me, too far away even
for my bicycle. Forget about taking the bus to
town - our area didn't get a bus system until I
was a teenager. More often than not when I was
not in school, I had to hang out with my
parents, and I would have to do stuff with them.
And often their idea of fun was going further
into the wilderness on hikes and stuff. On these
hikes, I tried to amuse myself by asking them
questions like, "Dad, back in England and in
certain boarding schools, the younger students
would act as the servants for the older
students. What did the older students call the
younger servant students?" (And in a tired
voice, my dad would answer, "They were
called..." ...well, read Roald Dahl's
autobiography Boy for the unprintable
answer.) As I got older, I did get into some
extra-curricular activities out of the house,
like the Cub Scouts and judo, but these were all
adult-run things, nothing like the adult-free
activities youths and teenagers always seemed to
be getting into in all of the comics and
television shows I would devour.
When a bus service finally came to the area
where I grew up, it did help my situation...
though only slightly. Though I could get out of
my neighborhood and into town, once I got into
town I still had to face the fact that even
there, there was little for a youth to do. The
town was geared towards seniors and retirees.
Now that you know my youth was deprived in one
area, maybe you can understand why I picked up
The Zoo Gang, not just because it
was made in the era when I grew up. It focuses
on youths having fun out of the house away from
parents. Here's the plot description that was on
the back of the box: "Tired of having nowhere to
go for fun, 15-year-old Kate, her brother Ricky,
and friends Bobbi, Danny and Val lease a
dilapidated nightclub called The Zoo from a
crotchety old drunk named Leatherface (Ben
Vereen). The Zoo becomes their home away from
home AND an overnight success... that is, until
the Donnelly Clan catches wind of it.... Little
Joe Donnelly and his brawny but dimwitted twin
brothers are a walking, talking trio of nuisance
- where they go, trouble is sure to follow. And
when they enter The Zoo ripe for a fight... a
fight is just what they get. They have pushed
The Zoo Gang too far and the battle for The Zoo
is on!... Thumbtacks, oil, marbles, and even a
daring guerrilla raid on the Donnelly's old
school bus fuel The Zoo Gang's cause as all-out
warfare is waged throughout the streets of the
town. But time is running out. Will Kate and the
rest of The Zoo Gang be able to save their
newfound nightclub from the greedy hands of the
Donnelly Clan?"
I was really glad that I was given that above
plot description on the back of The Zoo
Gang's video box. For one thing, it gave
me the opportunity to not have to slave over
having to write my own plot description from my
recollections of the movie, and it helped to
fill out the bulk of the above paragraph. But
the main reason why I was glad to get that plot
description was that I was seriously confused by
the first part of the movie when I actually
watched it. Let me explain. You are probably
thinking that the movie starts by introducing us
to its young characters, showing they are
frustrated by living in a boring town with
nothing to call their own. Then after a little
bit, they meet the homeless drunk Leatherface,
and not long after that he reveals to them the
abandoned nightclub that he says he owns. This
would spark the teens' imagination, and they get
the idea to fix the place up and make it a
nightclub for people their age, leading to a
montage of them cleaning and fixing up the
place, then opening it to great success, and
then the problems with the Donnelly clan start.
That's what I thought would more or less happen
before I actually watched the movie, but to my
surprise (and not a pleasant surprise), this is
not what happens. Believe it or not, when
the movie starts, it starts with the grand
opening of the nightclub! That's right, we don't
get a proper introduction of the main youthful
characters, the viewer is left in the dark for a
long time as to how they got this nightclub, and
we don't find out how they fixed up the
nightclub on their own (or, for that matter,
find out how they passed their county's various
building and business laws.)
Between writing the above paragraph and
starting to write this one, I spent some time
thinking about the movie's abrupt and confusing
beginning, and I came to a conclusion. That
being that the movie (currently running about 96
minutes long) was originally a lot longer, with
a beginning that was more or less like the one I
thought I was going to get, but that got cut out
during the editing stage when the movie
threatened to run too long. This would certainly
explain why the the movie (especially the first
part) bordered
on incoherent at times. Oh, I suppose there's a
chance that the writers (four
screenwriters are credited) and the two credited
directors may have felt that starting the movie
in the way I thought it was going to start would
have been too clichéd, and decided to start with
the movie's conflict early on. Actually, though
I complain a lot about clichés in my reviews, I
should say I only hate clichés that are done
badly; I can accept clichés if they are at least
executed well, and maybe done with a little
freshness added to them. But the more familiar
elements in The Zoo Gang - and
there are a lot of them - are very tired and
unimaginative. Take the bad guys in the movie,
the Donnelly clan. The patriarch of the clan is
a cowboy hat-wearing older gentleman who
reminded me of the "Rich Texan" character in
The Simpsons, without the cartoon's humorous
approach. "Goose", the main muscle of the
family, is a bald, bearded big guy who shrugs
off any blows people punch at him. There are
also two identical twin men, also acting as
muscle, who never say a word during the course
of the movie (well, hardly a word.)
The member of the Donnelly clan who is most
prominent and does most of the work is played by
Jackie Earle Haley, child star of The Bad
News Bears movies (and more recently
with movies such as The Watchmen.)
Based on his lackluster performance here, and
the fact that he sports a hideous platinum
blonde hairstyle, it probably explains why he
has distanced himself from this movie for these
reasons by often sporting a bald look in public in
recent years. There's not much positive to say
about any of the other acting to be found in the
movie. Ben Vereen (whose character is
confusingly called by three different
names over the course of the movie) sometimes
shows a little spark, but more often seems to
have taken his character's alcoholism a little
too close to heart. As for the actors who play
the central youthful characters, while I praise
the filmmakers for casting actors who actually
look like they are under eighteen years of age,
as well as also being actors who show some sign
of talent, it's obvious that they felt defeated
in their circumstances and ended up not standing
out, at least in a positive way (the actor who
plays Kate's little brother Ricky is especially
annoying.) With half of the plot out of the
door, much of the time is spent with the
characters doing absolutely nothing to
advance the story. This movie just spins its
wheels since it has absolutely no idea to give
us anything new. The end results are pathetic.
How pathetic does it get? Well, for one thing,
when it came to arranging for product placement
shots, all they could get was second-rate brands
like Domino's Pizza and Royal Crown cola.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also: Daredreamer,
My Man Adam,
Pink Nights
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