Sorry, but it’s true. The best children’s movies function on multiple levels to keep audience members of various ages entertained, or at least contentedly occupied. “Judy Moody,’’ which author Megan McDonald co-wrote with Kathy Waugh, doesn’t even bother with that. It has a single-mindedness of focus that can’t even be described euphemistically as admirable.
Australian newcomer Jordana Beatty gives it her all, though, as the titular character, a young girl in idyllic suburbia who’s psyched to share the summer with her closest friends. But then, one by one, they get dragged away to more exotic destinations (one goes to circus camp; the other, Borneo).
This leaves her pretty much all alone to run through the elaborate competition she’d devised for the group: a series of crazy activities that earn the participants an arbitrary number of “thrill points.’’ Sometimes, bonus thrill points are at stake; sometimes, they can be subtracted. This is not an exact science. Whoever has the most at the end of the summer, wins. Maybe it’s cute on the page. Here, it just seems like a hassle. Even describing it is a hassle.
Then, her parents inform her they’re heading to California for a little while, leaving Judy and her younger brother, Stink (Parris Mosteller) alone with their Aunt Opal (Heather Graham), whom they’ve never met. So the summer that Judy hoped would be “double-rare’’ (her word for good) instead looks like it’ll be a bummer.
But hey, what do you know? Aunt Opal is one of those wacky aunts, the kind who like to do art projects in the middle of the living room and make elaborate feasts that destroy the kitchen. The kind you only see in movies. Graham, to her credit, doesn’t overdo the zaniness and plays the character with a loose, hippie vibe.
So Judy learns how to stop worrying and love the summer. But the character is drawn so thinly, she just comes off as a narcissistic, whiny brat. And that’s a problem, since we’re supposed to like her. Instead, she makes you want to yell, “Come on, kid, it can’t be that bad. Go get a paper route or something.’’
Oh, wait — this takes place in the present day. Never mind.
“Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer,’’ a Relativity Media release, is rated PG for some mild rude humor and language. Running time: 91 minutes. One star out of four.
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Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:
G — General audiences. All ages admitted.
PG — Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.
PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.
R — Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.
NC-17 — No one under 17 admitted.
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