Stolen Summer Movie Review
Stolen Summer Review

"Stolen Summer" Overview

Rating: PG
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Pete JonesProducer : Ben Affleck,Matt Damon,Chris Moore
Screenwiter : Pete Jones
Starring Aidan Quinn, Bonnie Hunt, Kevin Pollack, Eddie Kaye Thomas, Adi Stein, Mike Weinberg, Brian Dennehy
Writer-director Pete Jones serves up a nostalgic slice-of-life in his
examination of friendship and faith in the winsome but saccharine Project
Greenlight winner Stolen Summer. Jones, the budding filmmaker whose chosen
screenplay would emerge victorious among hundreds of competitors, delivers a
film that has atmosphere and heart but ultimately ends up as just another
anemic, personal story with well-meaning sentiment. There is much being made
about the behind-the-scene politics of nurturing Jones’s winning pet project
through the Project Greenlight campaign, as well as his movie being the subject
of a hit HBO documentary series. Sadly, this all feels like some publicity
stunt more than it does a legitimate process in discovering talented artists.
Stolen Summer tells the poignant tale of two energetic 8-year old youngsters
living in the hazy days of Chicago circa 1976 where disco music and polyester
profoundly dominated the scene. Pint-sized rabble-rouser Catholic schoolboy
Pete O’Malley (Adi Stein) is sternly lectured by his teacher and told that he
must change his mischievous ways over the summertime. And so Pete is released
from school with some serious thinking to do while he basks in the glory days
of the upcoming summer. But Pete’s overworked firefighter father (Aidan Quinn)
and stay-at-home mother (Bonnie Hunt) are harried by all their responsibilities
and just don’t have the time to cater to all the personal and emotional needs
of their brood. Thus, Pete has to find his own way to spiritual salvation.
While trying his best to “see the light” and offer to share some of his
redemption, Pete parks himself right in front of a synagogue where he bumps
into Rabbi Jacobsen (Kevin Pollak) and makes a connection with Jacobsen’s son
Danny (Mike Weinberg). Together, the boys forge a nice little friendship until
it is revealed that poor Danny has leukemia.
Stolen Summer has a certain intimate coziness that captures the essence of the
working class. Native Chicagoan Jones’s script has imagination, but he gets
heavy-handed and sentimental, upstaging the good stuff. The idea of one child
innocently inflicting his belief system upon another has the making for a
resounding, soul-searching narrative, but Stolen Summer never capitalizes on
this concept and opts for the breezy and amateurish feel of an after school
special on the subject of tolerance.
You can find the movie on DVD or video on its own, but you're better off
checking out the 4-disc set that includes the film plus the entire Project
Greenlight TV series (uncensored) and another disc of bonus materials.
Watching the casting process, budgeting politics, and shooting a scene under a
train track is actually painful. Of course, watching the film itself is painful
too, but the Greenlight stuff is like a good hurt. The bonus disc features
additional footage shot for the series, including some good spoofs and other
gags (most notable the hilarious "How to Imitate Chris Moore" challenge,
courtesy of Ben Affleck). The movie itself also sports deleted scenes and a
commentary track, plus a comparison between the short Pete Jones created for
the contest vs. the actual scene as seen in the film. Interesting, but we just
wish it was a better movie.
You stole my summer. Now give it back.
Reviewer: Frank Ochieng





