IMDb RATING
6.3/10
4.9K
YOUR RATING
At the urging of his former mentor and Magic Camp owner Roy Preston, Andy returns as a counselor to the camp of his youth hoping to reignite his career.At the urging of his former mentor and Magic Camp owner Roy Preston, Andy returns as a counselor to the camp of his youth hoping to reignite his career.At the urging of his former mentor and Magic Camp owner Roy Preston, Andy returns as a counselor to the camp of his youth hoping to reignite his career.
Nathaniel Logan McIntyre
- Theo
- (as Nathaniel McIntyre)
Josie Totah
- Judd
- (as J.J. Totah)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThere was a month of pre-production during which the actors learned magic tricks. This was to ensure that the actors were confident and able to do their tricks correctly by filming time.
- GoofsRuth causes a falcon to appear on her arm behind a huge card fan. As the camera pans back over to counselor Andy, then begins to glide through the scene, Ruth is seen in the distance lowering an obviously styrofoam or stuffed, lightweight, peregrine-falcon prop.
- ConnectionsReferences History of the World: Part I (1981)
- SoundtracksSome Magic
Written by Jennifer Hanson, Nick Brophy
Performed by LÒNIS
Courtesy of Peer Southern Productions, Inc.
Featured review
Great watch, will watch again, and do recommend.
I saw Adam Devine first (on Disney of all places, he's not usually Disney compliant), and said, "Oh this will be good, at least I won't have to pay close attention.", then saw "Magic Camp", and said, "Sold!", knowing I'd have to be watching magic tricks. I'm a fan of magic, but I tend to watch them like I do movies, critically. And when they're in movies ("Now You See Me") what you're actually watching for is what is semi-legitimate and what is a movie magic effect.
While the beginning is a little disappointing, it has to do with the establishing part of the movie. The (obvious) misdirection of it also parallels a magic trick, as does the pace of the movie (and it's directly discussed in the movie.).
Suddenly discovering Jillian Jacobs' involvement was great, and so is she, even if she's a part-time antagonist as a rival counselor.
Basically, for me, there is a better movie / story in here if you remove Adam Devine as the protagonist. The kids' story(ies) are far more satisfying that the adults, and they very much deserved their own movie.
While I see a comparison to "School of Rock", Adam Devine is not Jack Black, and his character doesn't really give the redeemable feel. It might come down to Devine's acting ability, but he's just not likeable. He says and does the things that should make him likeable, but it comes of as disingenuous. He's still a jerk, but he grows to love magic.
Again though, this is highly recommended, and I would have loved to just see their talent show as a recorded live performance.
If you love magic, then give this a watch.
I saw Adam Devine first (on Disney of all places, he's not usually Disney compliant), and said, "Oh this will be good, at least I won't have to pay close attention.", then saw "Magic Camp", and said, "Sold!", knowing I'd have to be watching magic tricks. I'm a fan of magic, but I tend to watch them like I do movies, critically. And when they're in movies ("Now You See Me") what you're actually watching for is what is semi-legitimate and what is a movie magic effect.
While the beginning is a little disappointing, it has to do with the establishing part of the movie. The (obvious) misdirection of it also parallels a magic trick, as does the pace of the movie (and it's directly discussed in the movie.).
Suddenly discovering Jillian Jacobs' involvement was great, and so is she, even if she's a part-time antagonist as a rival counselor.
Basically, for me, there is a better movie / story in here if you remove Adam Devine as the protagonist. The kids' story(ies) are far more satisfying that the adults, and they very much deserved their own movie.
While I see a comparison to "School of Rock", Adam Devine is not Jack Black, and his character doesn't really give the redeemable feel. It might come down to Devine's acting ability, but he's just not likeable. He says and does the things that should make him likeable, but it comes of as disingenuous. He's still a jerk, but he grows to love magic.
Again though, this is highly recommended, and I would have loved to just see their talent show as a recorded live performance.
If you love magic, then give this a watch.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Trại Hè Ảo Thuật
- Filming locations
- Moorpark, California, USA(Filming Location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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