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Revision as of 19:29, 2 January 2013

Leave It to Beaver
Directed byAndy Cadiff
Written byBrian Levant
Lon Diamond
Produced byRobert Simonds
StarringChristopher McDonald
Janine Turner
Cameron Finley
Erik von Detten
Erika Christensen
Adam Zolotin
CinematographyThomas Del Ruth
Edited byAlan Heim
Music byRandy Edelman
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • August 22, 1997 (1997-08-22)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million
Box office$10,925,060

Leave It to Beaver is a 1997 film that is a remake of the TV series of the same name. There are many in-jokes related to the original series within the movie.[1]

Plot

Beaver (Cameron Finley) gets his heart set on a bicycle in the store window, but does not think his parents will shell out that money for it. Eddie Haskell (Adam Zolotin) tells him that if he sucks up to his father (Christopher McDonald), by signing up for football, he will be sure to get the bike on his upcoming birthday. Beaver enrolls on the football team and doggedly endures the practices, despite his disadvantage of being smaller than most his teammates. As Eddie predicted, Ward is glad Beaver signed up for football, as evidenced by a brief fantasy Ward has of Beaver making a touchdown while several professional football players all fail to tackle him. However, the first game of the season ends poorly when Beaver passes the ball to a kid on the opposing team when he mistakingly remembered him as a friend from summer camp. On the first day of school five days later, Ward and June (Janine Turner) tell Wally to drop Beaver off and pick him up for a few days because he has never ridden his bike there before. At school Beaver sits beside a very pretty girl named Susan Akatsu (Brenda Song) and has a kind teacher named Miss Landers (Grace Phillips). After school Eddie asks Wally to come to the soda shop to see him flirt with Karen (Erika Christensen). Eddie does not want Beaver to follow them, so Wally leaves him alone at the bike rack telling him he will be back in a second.

Beaver is polishing his bike when a punk teenager (Glenn Walker Harris Jr.) comes over and admires it and asks him if he can show him some cool bike tricks. He agrees and the boy shows him some tricks before riding off with the bike. Inside the shop it becomes apparent that Karen likes Wally, not Eddie. When Wally and Eddie come out of the shop and hear that Beaver's bike got stolen they look for it but can't find it. During dinner that night, the boys try to cover up the fact that the bike was stolen, but to no avail. When Ward hears this he is upset with Beaver, but angrier at Wally because he was responsible for watching Beaver. In the boys' bedroom, they get into a fight which sends Beaver's new computer flying out the window. Wally grabs the wire and tries to pull it in and does, but the wire breaks, and it falls out the window and crashes into many pieces.

Beaver decides to skip football practice and study instead, and Wally starts spending more time with Karen now instead of Beaver. Beaver catches up with the punk who stole his bike, who challenges him to a dangerous stunt to climb into a gigantic coffee mug atop the local cafe, but when Beaver does so, the punk rides off again and Beaver is stuck. The fire department and Ward help get Beaver down, whereupon Ward realizes Beaver may be under too much pressure. Ward says he has found out about Beaver's neglect of practices, but says he can quit the team if he wants. Beaver, however, decides to go back to the team no matter how poorly he has been doing. During the last game, Beaver gets a catch and runs it for a touchdown. By the concession stands, he finds the punk with his bike and takes it back, causing the punk to knock over Eddie Haskell, who both plummet into a vat of molten chocolate. Karen, who realizes Eddie's true nature, dumps Eddie by adding whipped cream to his chocolate-covered self and accepts Wally asking her out. At home, Ward reads Beaver a bedtime story whereupon in the boys' bedroom is a newspaper headline about the winning game, aptly titled "Leave It to Beaver".

Cast

Box office

The film grossed an estimated $10,925,062 in the United States and Canada. Compared to its $15 million budget, the film was a flop.

Opening weekend

  • $3,252,450 (USA) (24 August 1997) (1,880 screens)

Home video release history

References

  1. ^ "SUMMER SNEAKS; Cut-Rate Comedy; 'Leave It to Beaver' producer Robert Simonds loves a good, cheap laugh. Then he snickers all the way to the bank". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-12-28.