Wet Hot American Summer Nude

Wet Hot American Summer Nude




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Wet Hot American Summer Nude
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Home Article Wet Hot American Summer star Rob Huebel says there's plenty of nudity in the Netflix prequel
By Megan Daley Updated May 01, 2015 at 07:36 PM EDT
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Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp
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Wet Hot American Summer star Rob Huebel says there's plenty of nudity in the Netflix prequel
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The writers and producers of the upcoming Netflix series Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp have been pretty tight-lipped about the prequel. But cast member and comedian Rob Huebel gave fans a little something to look forward to in this EW exclusive.
“Because it’s on Netflix, every scene is just nude from the waist down,” Heubel jokes. “Everybody. Men, women—doesn’t matter. Just everyone is nude in every scene.”
A naked Bradley Cooper? Well, you didn’t hear it from Huebel—the government and the high Netflix authorities can never know.
Luckily, Wet Hot fans won’t have to wait too long to see for themselves, as First Day of Camp premieres on July 17. Beyond First Day , there could be even more on the way. Creator David Wain said in an interview with EW that the journey for Camp Firewood’s campers and counselors might not be over just yet.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

January 23, 2001 ( 2001-01-23 ) (Sundance) [1]
July 27, 2001 ( 2001-07-27 ) (New York City)


Janeane Garofalo as Beth
David Hyde Pierce as Professor Henry Newman
Molly Shannon as Gail von Kleinenstein
Paul Rudd as Andy
Christopher Meloni as Gene
Michael Showalter as Gerald "Coop" Cooperberg/Alan Shemper
Marguerite Moreau as Katie Finnerty
Ken Marino as Victor Pulak
Michael Ian Black as McKinley
Zak Orth as J.J.
A. D. Miles as Gary
Nina Hellman as Nancy
Amy Poehler as Susie
Bradley Cooper as Ben
Marisa Ryan as Abby Bernstein
Kevin Sussman as Steve
Elizabeth Banks as Lindsay
Joe Lo Truglio as Neil
Judah Friedlander as Ron von Kleinenstein
Gideon Jacobs as Aaron
H. Jon Benjamin as Can of Mixed Vegetables



^ Harvey, Dennis (January 30, 2001). "Wet Hot American Summer" . Variety . Retrieved July 7, 2020 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer " . British Board of Film Classification . Retrieved May 12, 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Jeff Goldsmith (June 17, 2011). "David Wain – Wet Hot American Summer " . Q&A with Jeff Goldsmith (Podcast). Blogger/Liberated Syndication . Retrieved June 23, 2011 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer (2001)" . Box Office Mojo . IMDb . Retrieved February 20, 2011 .

^ Tobias, Scott (June 11, 2008). "The New Cult Canon: Wet Hot American Summer " . The AV Club . Retrieved February 20, 2011 .

^ "The Rumpus" . Retrieved September 2, 2009 .

^ Scheer, Paul (October 30, 2012). "Sleepaway Camp, episode #48 of How Did This Get Made?" . Earwolf . Retrieved August 8, 2015 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer " . Archives. Sundance Institute . Retrieved June 23, 2011 .

^ Collis, Clark (July 30, 2015). " 'Wet Hot American Summer': The crazy story behind the cult classic" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved August 28, 2015 .

^ "Full Credit List" . Wet Hot American Summer official website . Archived from the original on July 18, 2011 . Retrieved February 15, 2009 .

^ Jump up to: a b c " Wet Hot history" . Wet Hot American Summer official website . Archived from the original on July 18, 2011 . Retrieved June 23, 2011 .

^ "From Universal Pictures Home Entertainment: Wet Hot American Summer – UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif., April 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/" . PR Newswire . Retrieved July 27, 2015 .

^ "Wet Hot American Summer (2001)" . Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved August 2, 2019 .

^ "Wet Hot American Summer (2001)" . Metacritic . Retrieved June 1, 2013 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer " . Chicago Sun-Times . Roger Ebert Reviews. August 31, 2001 . Retrieved February 15, 2009 .

^ "Review" . Wet Hot American Summer official website . Retrieved February 20, 2011 .

^ "Bullseye with Jesse Thorn: Jim Rash, Bob Saget, Jessica St. Clair and Lennon Parham" . Maximum Fun . April 29, 2014 . Retrieved July 27, 2015 .

^ "Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp: Season 1" . Rotten Tomatoes .

^ "Netflix is going back to camp with Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later" . The A.V. Club . April 27, 2016.

^ "Coolidge Corner Theatre – Wet Hot American Summer " . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer 6.10.11 – 6.29.11" . Nao Live . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ " Wet Hot American Summer 10th Anniversary Q&A Screening with co-writer/director David Wain!" . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ "Cult movie classics get big-screen showings" . The Morning Journal . June 3, 2011 . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ Collis, Clark (August 2, 2011). " Wet Hot American Summer 10th anniversary: David Wain, Michael Showalter, and Joe Lo Truglio remember their days at Camp Firewood" . Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ "The Cast Of Wet Hot American Summer Reunited At SF Sketchfest" . Retrieved December 23, 2012 .

^ Seabaugh, Julie (July 29, 2015). " 'Wet Hot American Summer': Oral History Details False Starts, Faking Camp Firewood" . Variety .


Wet Hot American Summer is a 2001 American satirical comedy film directed by David Wain from a screenplay written by Wain and Michael Showalter . The film features an ensemble cast , including Janeane Garofalo , David Hyde Pierce , Molly Shannon , Paul Rudd , Christopher Meloni , Michael Showalter (and various other members of the sketch comedy group The State ), Elizabeth Banks , Ken Marino , Michael Ian Black , Bradley Cooper (in his film debut), Amy Poehler , Zak Orth , and A. D. Miles . It takes place during the last full day at a fictional summer camp in 1981, and spoofs the sex comedies aimed at teen audiences of that era.

The film was a critical and commercial failure, but has since developed a cult following , [5] as many of its cast members have gone on to high-profile work. Netflix revived the franchise with the release of an eight-episode prequel series starring most of the film's original cast, on July 31, 2015; and an eight-episode sequel series , set ten years after the original film, on August 4, 2017.

In 1981, Camp Firewood, a summer camp located near Waterville, Maine , is preparing for its last day of camp. Counselors have one last chance to have a romantic encounter with another person at Camp Firewood. All the while, Ben and Susie, two overzealous drama instructors, attempt to produce and choreograph the greatest talent show Camp Firewood has ever seen. Beth, the camp director, struggles to keep her counselors in order—and her campers alive—while falling in love with Henry, an astrophysics associate professor at Colby College . Henry has to devise a plan to save the camp from a piece of NASA 's Skylab , which is falling to Earth.

Shy Coop has a crush on Katie, his fellow counselor, but has to pry her away from her rebellious, obnoxious, and obviously unfaithful boyfriend, Andy. Only Gene, the camp chef, can help Coop win Katie—with some help from a talking can of mixed vegetables. Gary, Gene's unfortunately chosen apprentice, and J.J. attempt to figure out why their friend McKinley has never been with a woman. They are surprised to find that McKinley is in love with Ben, whom he marries in a ceremony at the lake. Victor attempts to lose his virginity with the resident loose-girl Abby, but a series of mishaps get in his way.

The film is based on the experiences Wain had while attending Camp Modin , a Jewish camp, located in Belgrade, Maine , and Showalter had at Camp Mohawk in the Berkshires in Cheshire, Massachusetts . [6] During one scene, the counselors take a trip into Waterville, Maine , which is not far from the camp. It is also a parody of, and homage to, other films about summer camp, including Meatballs (1979), Little Darlings (1980), Sleepaway Camp (1983), [7] and Indian Summer (1993). According to Wain, they wanted to make a film structured like the films Nashville , Dazed and Confused and Do the Right Thing —"films that take place in one contained time period that have lots of different characters." [3]

The film's financing took three years to assemble; in a June 2011 interview, Wain revealed the film's budget was $1.8 million; he noted that during the 2001 Sundance Film Festival , [8] the film had been promoted as costing $5 million, in an attempt to attract a better offer from a distributor. [3] Because of the film's relatively small budget, the cast was paid very little; Paul Rudd has stated that he is uncertain that he received any compensation at all for the film. [9]

Principal photography lasted 28 days in May 2000, and, according to director David Wain, it rained on every day of shooting. [3] Exterior shots were filmed when possible, sometimes under covers or umbrellas, but some scenes were moved indoors instead. In many interior scenes, rain seen outside turns into sun as soon as characters step outside. Due to the cold, the actors' breath can be seen in some outdoor scenes. [3] The film was shot at Camp Towanda in Honesdale, Pennsylvania . [10]

As the film is set in the early 1980s, the film's soundtrack features songs from many popular bands of the era, most notably Jefferson Starship , Rick Springfield , Loverboy , and KISS .

Wet Hot American Summer premiered at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival , where it was screened four times to sold-out crowds, [11] though it failed to attract a distributor. [3] Months later, USA Films offered the filmmakers $100,000 for the film, with virtually no participation for the filmmakers, an offer the film's investors accepted. It premiered in New York City on July 27, 2001, then received a limited theatrical release in fewer than 30 cities. [11]

The film was released in both VHS and DVD formats on January 15, 2002. [11] In 2011, Wain tried to convince Universal Studios to prepare either a 10th anniversary home video re-release with extra features, or a Blu-ray release, but Universal rejected the ideas. The film was released on Blu-ray on May 12, 2015. [12]

Wet Hot American Summer received mostly negative reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 38%, based on 76 reviews, with an average rating of 4.85/10. The website's critical consensus reads, " Wet Hot American Summer ' s incredibly talented cast is too often outmatched by a deeply silly script that misses its targets at least as often as it skewers them." [13] Metacritic gives the film a score of 42 out of 100, based on 24 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [14]

Roger Ebert rated the film with one star out of four. His review took the form of a tongue-in-cheek parody of Allan Sherman 's " Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh ". [15]

In contrast, Entertainment Weekly 's Owen Gleiberman awarded the film an "A", and named it as one of the ten best films of the year. Newsweek ' s David Ansen also lauded it, calling it a "gloriously silly romp" that "made me laugh harder than any other movie this summer. Make that this year." [16] Numerous other critics have praised the film as a witty pop satire and it has gone on to achieve a cult following. [ citation needed ]


Actress Kristen Bell stated on NPR on September 2, 2012, that Wet Hot American Summer was her favorite film, having watched it "hundreds of times." NPR host Jesse Thorn said on the April 29, 2014, episode of Bullseye :
When someone has an open enough heart to accept this silliness—and that's what it's about for me, an open heart—if someone's heart is open to Wet Hot American Summer , they love it. And that's when I know that me and them, we've got an unbreakable bond. Together forever. Like camp counselors. [17]
The film is followed by two Netflix series, with one serving as a prequel and one as a sequel. The prequel, First Day of Camp , was released on July 31, 2015, [18] while the sequel, Ten Years Later , was released on August 4, 2017. [19]

Events were held around the country to celebrate the film's 10-year anniversary in 2011 and 2012, including a screening of the film in Boston, [20] an art show in Santa Monica of works inspired by the film, with a reception hosted by Wain, [21] a screening at the Los Angeles Film School with a Q&A with Wain, [22] a midnight screening in Cleveland , Ohio, [23] a 10th anniversary celebration event with the members of Stella in Brooklyn, [24] and a reading of the script at the San Francisco Comedy Festival , with much of the original cast. [25]

During an interview with Variety , Wain and Showalter stated that they wrote a pilot for a possible Fox television series based on the film. Wain described the series as a "22-minute Fox sitcom with commercials and nothing Rated R, so it was a little bit odd." [26] The pilot was not picked up for a series.

Alongside the prequel series, a making-of documentary, Hurricane of Fun: The Making of Wet Hot , was released on Netflix on July 24, 2015, consisting of behind-the-scenes interviews and footage shot during the filming of the movie.

Wikiquote has quotations related to Wet Hot American Summer .

Now Reading The 10 Years Later Sex Scene You Won't Forget
Warning: Hilarious spoilers for Wet Hot American Summer: 10 Years Later are ahead. Come back when you’ve finished episode 6, “Rain.”
Unexpected television sex scenes lately fallen into two camps: the purposefully profound and boundary-pushing or rape scenes that turn sex into sexual violence . Unless you’ve been bingeing the insanely awkward romantic comedy Chewing Gum on Netflix it’s hard to find a TV sex scene that is funnier than it is serious. Thankfully, the streaming gods have blessed us with the silly-and-secretly-smart treat that is Wet House American Summer: 10 Years Later . The amazingly well-executed cult movie threequel series offers up a the funniest sex scene in recent memory by throwing resident camp virgin Victor (Ken Marino) into a deeply, deeply bizarre threesome in episode 6, "Rain."
The sex scene already has a lot riding on it, considering who’s starring in it. By the time "26-year-old" Victor ends up at the infirmary with Donna (Lake Bell) and her partner Yaron (David Wain), he’s been pretending to be a regular ladies man for at least a decade in Camp Firewood time. But, Victor has leaned so far into his horndog routine, everyone has now realized it’s a complete act. This is a guy who refers to sex as "a little skunky, monkey, funky, trunky, junkie" while humping the air, and can’t even say the word "vagina" — it’s no shock to the system to think maybe young women aren’t lining up for a piece of Vic. The bartender’s sex machine act is so grating, his friends note while Vic poorly gyrates his crotch, " Wow . He’s still a virgin. Look at him." The problem isn’t the fact Vic hasn’t had sex yet — hey, everyone goes at their own pace ! — the problem is how much he’s desperately overcompensating to weird, immature, sexist results.
That’s why the lead-up to Victor swiping his V-card in itself is hilarious. After Camp Firewood’s most adventure couple, Donna and Yaron, ask Victor to impregnate Donna the old-fashioned way, he’s finally forced to deal with his lies head-on. When asked where the "confident" Vic has gone, he yells at best friend Neil (Joe Lo Truglio), "That man is a fraud, Neil. A fake, freaking fraud." To feel like less of a "fraud" Neil decides to teach Victor how to do the deed by pantomiming "normal sex" on a mattress. While Vic’s stroke game varies between terrifying and literally off the mark, and he humps his way completely off of the matt, it’s his pillow talk that is truly worth a laugh out loud. Victor can’t stop manically saying "hi" or "goodbye" to his prospective lady partner, despite Neil’s pleas to nix any form of salutation.
When Sex 101 graduate Victor shows up to make a baby, things go from funny to hauntingly hysterical. Donna reveals it’s time for "the ceremony," which Yaron will be present and active during. The ceremony involves masks. The masks are perfect realistic replicas of Donna, Yaron, and Victor’s respective faces. Please imagine if your first time was a threesome involving sacred hand-painted robes and a mask of your own face, with the appropriate hairstyle included. If that already seems like The Worst, Victor’s experience gets even weirder when Donna explains, "All of us will pick a mask at random and our journey will begin." That means if Vic picks any mask that isn’t of his own face, which he has a 66% chance of doing, he’ll be staring at himself while losing his virginity. Of course, since Wet Hot American Summer is a comedy of extremes, that’s exactly what happens, leading to Victor essentially penetrating himself. With Donna on top, we see Victor screaming about the new sensations he’s experiencing while his own face twin looks down at him.
Considering how unconventional all of this is, it's easy to feel bad about Victor's first time, but there’s proof we should all be happy for him. Once everyone is finished, he reminiscences about how "sex is amazing" and can’t stop smiling. Yaron even tells Victor he did "a great job," which the bartender finds truly touching. We guess Yaron was telling the truth, since Donna announces she’s already pregnant and can feel the baby kick. Please don’t question how time works in the Wet Hot universe, that’s not important. Mission accomplished, Vic!
W.H.A.S.: 10 Years Later is a great reminder that sex can be funny, weird, and sometimes filled with very realistic masks, apparently. Congrats to Victor on finally losing it.
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