Rainbow TRIBE Film Review Common meaning Media

Overview of a healthy reasonable medium

Brian Costello

From Brian Costello

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Based on the research of the development of the child. How do we rate?


Age 10+







Tween Camp is a beautiful filled with Otto Humor, Iffy behavior.


Age 9+







Based on 4 parent reviews

What is the story like?

Morgan Roberts, aka “boss” (David James Elliott), is a medieval man sick of cancer. In the hope that he will return to happier times and place, he returns to the summer camp of his young, where he will work as an advisor at the camp. He renews his friendship with a friend of childhood camps Sunny (Ed Quinn) and is looking forward to the peaceful summer consultation per day, and then stare at northern lights at night. Instead, what he gets is Ragtag’s disgusting kids of the Apache camp, a van-control pile that would rather pass gas and run the food fight than to drive in canoes or sing songs of fire. As the boss teaches to tame this wild crowd, he grows to like them, and how he learns, he reveals to teach him life, growing up and growing up.

Is that good?

The problem with the Rainbow tribe is that he is trying to be a drama and comedy, and both fails. While the boss returns to the summer camp of his childhood to try his life in the middle age, while he struggles, you are more inclined to complain about that he has to deal with so disgusting and non-kicked boys. A serious message of the film is easily overwhelmed by immature hijins between these campers as they get married, the gas passes and make one inappropriate reference for another.

In the middle of a rich child, a difficult child, a disgusting child, asthmatic child, and a quiet child, just a quiet child is the least cute, and that’s because he says nothing until he says until, at the end of the movie. The rest of the children cuts out the term “bad cloes”, and their actions will meet impressive Tweens and younger children with IFFY ideas and inappropriate jokes to carry them in puberty.

Talk to your kids about …

  • Families can talk about role models. Do the viewing of the characters behave badly, affecting you?

  • How is this film comparing to other movies placed in summer camps?

  • How are different boys in Apache camp standing from each other? What are their different personality traits and how have they revived through their actions? Do you notice stereotypes?

Did we miss something on diversity?

Research shows the connection between child’s healthy self-esteem and positive portraits in the media. That is why we added the “Different National Teams” section into our examinations that will overturn. You can help us to help children

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