Caddyshack
The film takes place in the framework of a sports comedy through a golf club. The club is rich in its members and its oddity, but its employees are poor and hardworking. Danny is a teenage boy helping the players while they are at the golf course, Danny accepts to do anything to collect enough money to go to university. To this end, Danny is exposed to many paradoxes and events.
11 March 1927, Brooklyn, New York, USA
27 July 1944, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
28 August 1928, Brantford, Ontario, Canada
13 January 1912, New Braunfels, Texas, USA
13 December 1920, Jacksonville, Florida, USA
13 August 1948, Dallas, Texas, USA
August 24, 2010
Never mind the fact that the plot regularly goes off track and into the rough, Caddyshack offers laughs a plenty.
October 23, 2004
Caddyshack never finds a consistent comic note of its own, but it plays host to all sorts of approaches from its stars, who sometimes hardly seem to be occupying the same movie.
August 04, 2015
Caddyshack, a derelict farce that lurches about in search of hilarious possibilities among the members and employes of a country club, is the latest misbegotten spawn of National Lampoon's Animal House.
August 04, 2015
There is a plot to this enjoyably erratic comedy... But basically it's a framework on which the writers, two of whom (Harold Ramis and Douglas Kenney) are Animal House alumni, can hang vulgar, obvious, yet often amusing gags.
March 21, 2007
This vaguely likable, too-tame comedy falls short of the mark.
July 30, 2012
There's still a lot of fun in this movie, and most of that comes from the heartfelt performances from the cast.
August 30, 2004
A pleasantly loose-limbed sort of movie with some comic moments, most of them belonging to Mr. Dangerfield.
August 16, 2011
A funny slapstick comedy, starring Billy Murray in top form
June 24, 2006
If you're still at the age when farting and nose-picking seem funny, then Caddyshack should knock you dead.
January 01, 2011
Classic '80s comedy; not for kids.
January 26, 2017
Essentially Animal House on the links, it's neither as raucous nor as outrageous as that definitive college comedy but it has the same rebellious spirit and a great cast of comedy legends showing the young co-stars how it's done.
March 21, 2007
The first-time director, Harold Ramis, can't hold it together: the picture lurches from style to style (including some ill-placed whimsy with a gopher puppet) and collapses somewhere between sitcom and sketch farce.

