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|preceded_by = ''[[Daddy Day Care]]''
|preceded_by = ''[[Daddy Day Care]]''
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'''''Daddy Day Camp''''' is a [[2007 in film|2007]] [[comedy film]] directed by [[Fred Savage]], a [[sequel]] to ''[[Daddy Day Care]]''. All returning characters have been recast, with [[Cuba Gooding, Jr.]] assuming the lead role of [[Eddie Murphy]]. The film was produced by [[Revolution Studios]] for [[TriStar Pictures]].
'''''Daddy Day Camp''''' also known as '''''Daddy Day Care 2''''' is a [[2007 in film|2007]] [[comedy film]] directed by [[Fred Savage]], a [[sequel]] to ''[[Daddy Day Care]]''. All returning characters have been recast, with [[Cuba Gooding, Jr.]] assuming the lead role of [[Eddie Murphy]]. The film was produced by [[Revolution Studios]] for [[TriStar Pictures]].


==Plot==
==Plot==

Revision as of 21:44, 29 July 2008

Daddy Day Camp
Promotional movie poster for the film
Directed byFred Savage
Written byGeoff Rodkey
Produced byMatt Berenson
John Davis
Wyck Godfrey
StarringCuba Gooding, Jr.
Paul Rae
Lochlyn Munro
Tamala Jones
Spencir Bridges
Richard Gant
Josh McLerran
Talon Ackerman
Brian Doyle-Murray
CinematographySteven B. Poster
Edited byChristopher Greenbury
Music byJames Dooley
Distributed byTriStar Pictures Revolution Studios
Release dates
August 8, 2007
Running time
93 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7,000,000 (estimated)

Daddy Day Camp also known as Daddy Day Care 2 is a 2007 comedy film directed by Fred Savage, a sequel to Daddy Day Care. All returning characters have been recast, with Cuba Gooding, Jr. assuming the lead role of Eddie Murphy. The film was produced by Revolution Studios for TriStar Pictures.

Plot

After opening Daddy Day Care, Charlie (Gooding, Jr.) decides to expand his business and buys a dilapidated camp he attended as a kid, turning it into Daddy Day Camp with friend, Phil Ryerson (Rae). Charlie soon faces foreclosure, low enrollment, and plenty of repairs. The few kids that remain at the camp eventually band together when Charlie's father, Col. Buck Hinton, starts to control the whole camp and eventually the kids start to form a team instead of fighting each other. They then battle the rival day camp in an Olympian. In the end the kids prevail and more kids come to the camp saving Camp Driftwood from foreclosure.

Cast

Technical info

Reception

Daddy Day Camp currently holds 1% on Rotten Tomatoes and 13 on Metacritic with 18 reviews. The film received a rare "F" from The A.V. Club.[1] On its first day of release, the film came in a mediocre 9th place with $773,706. Its opening weekend totalled just $3,402,678 in over 2,000 screens.

On NBC's "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno", guest Richard Roeper (co-host of the show At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper) commented that while he cannot currently use "two thumbs up" to review movies (due to a contract dispute between the trademark's owner, Roger Ebert, and distributor Disney-ABC Domestic Television) he still has a finger he can use to review Daddy Day Camp.[citation needed] The film received five Razzie nominations, including Worst Picture, and won the award for Worst Prequel or Sequel.

References