TV Rewind: Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp Was the Rare Comedy Revival that Earned Its Comeback

TV Rewind: Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp Was the Rare Comedy Revival that Earned Its Comeback
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Platforms like Netflix initially championed themselves on offering us stuff we’d never seen before – at least, nothing with this sharpness, or innovation, or specificity. But they were still as much of a corporation as their network competitors, and like many disruptors, soon the rhetoric of being “cutting edge” fell away to reveal the same programming trends that all networks and studios (who soon launched their own streaming services) were obsessed with: nostalgia.

It’s still weird that Netflix, which didn’t start funding original programming until 2011, would so brazenly fund reboots and follow-ups to properties they had no involvement in, but it makes sense that they became flagbearers of shameless nostalgia bait. They were disruptors, yes, but they still relied on the prestige and value of television created under a traditional system. Comedy was key to Netflix’s reboot strategy—the allure of recapturing warm, happy vibes is fundamental to nostalgia—and over the years, a range of comedy showrunners and producers have trotted out their stable of performers and quips to increasingly muted and confused reception.

Netflix still leads the pack with two revivals of Arrested Development, along with Full House, Gilmore Girls, and recently, That ‘70s Show. Other platforms followed suit with reboots of varying success: Saved by the Bell, Punky Brewster, Frasier, iCarly, Fraggle Rock, and Clone High. Networks cashed in on their older-skewing audience by resurrecting Rosanne (which quickly transitioned into The Conners), Will & Grace, and Night Court—all of which ran for multiple seasons. (None of the above shows are still in production.)

Maybe the eight episode prequel series Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp seems free of this nostalgia-raiding mindset because of how unique its conception and execution feel. When it premiered on Netflix ten years ago, First Day of Camp was, to its devout niche of fans, a long-awaited and necessary return to a indie comedy from 2001, a cult hit which parodied lowbrow summer camp features like Meatballs and Summer Camp, and served as an early launchpad for talent like Amy Poehler, Paul Rudd, Bradley Cooper, and Elizabeth Banks, as well as for co-writers Michael Showalter and David Wain.

The comedy of Wet Hot American Summer that Showalter and Wain developed with co-star Michael Ian Black in their troupe Stella was head-turning in its off-kilter, parodic intensity; set on the last day of a summer camp in 1981 Maine, Wet Hot frequently breaks the boundaries of its genre pastiche with nonsense absurdity, punishingly elongated and self-aware gags, and plenty of screaming. The film was met with little love upon first release, but it built enough of a cult following for Showalter and Wain to successfully pitch a follow-up to Netflix. What’s more, every adult cast member of the original makes a repeat appearance in First Day of Camp (the film is set on the last day of the same summer), including megastars like Cooper and Rudd, who had just debuted as Ant-Man weeks prior.

Another reason why First Day of Camp escapes the ire directed at other comedy revivals is that it’s so smartly assembled. A core component of the original parody was that all the adult cast were playing 16 and 17-year-olds, something that was present in ‘80s summer camp movies but not intended to be funny. Fourteen years on from Wet Hot, the crappy wigs and crass teenage dialects feel far more egregious from a cast of 40-somethings who are technically supposed to be eight weeks younger than they were in the film. It is expertly carried by the winning chaotic tone and dozens of recognizable actors (new additions include Jon Hamm, Michael Cera, Bruce Greenwood, Chris Pine, Jason Schwartzman, Kristen Wiig, and Lake Bell) who switch between broad, earnest pastiche with stabs of blunt, naturalistic confusion and frustration.

The ensemble format of Wet Hot allowed for a lot of bizarre, tonally clashing storylines that became funnier once they slotted alongside each other. In First Day of Camp, Showalter and Wain take advantage of their elongated, near-four-hour runtime by doing this tenfold. Across the prequel’s eight episodes, the stakes include a nasty corporation poisoning the camp with toxic waste, a landmark court case against the colluding U.S. government, a covert assassin prowling the camp grounds, a rock star folk hero emerging from self-imposed exile, a rival uppercrust summer camp waging violent war on our characters’ camp—alongside a staff musical going off without a hitch, a couple of obnoxious counsellors losing their virginity, and an anxious young camper courting his crush against the wishes of a mean bully.

First Day of Camp feels overstuffed in a good way, showing the clear faults of the ensemble comedy format by revealing how disconnected and alienated its storylines are from one another. This fractured story structure is the only way that all the cast could appear in the series; as a result of impossible scheduling, many new and returning actors never interact with each other, and you can easily tell that Cooper has shot all his isolated scenes in a shorter amount of time than his less famous co-stars. 

Central to First Day of Camp’s comedy is a conflicted sense of sincerity—every returning performer has a lot of love for this world and the original film, but a prequel like this only works if treacly, sentimental nostalgia is rejected and undermined at unexpected moments. Ten years after its release, First Day of Camp stands apart from the dawning wave of resurrected TV comedy because it was the rare property that benefited from expansion, from returning to a unique comedic style and seeing what it could generate before wearing itself out. Showalter and Wain honor their own legacy with a miniseries that is amused by how incongruous it is to the original, despite the returning characters and a faithfully reconstructed spirit of stupidity. First Day of Camp knew there was more to discover in the memories of summers long ago.


Rory Doherty is a screenwriter, playwright and culture writer based in Edinburgh, Scotland. You can follow his thoughts about all things stories @roryhasopinions.

 
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