Rating: PG
Genre:
Comedy Drama
Theatrical Release: 03/22/2002(USA
Release Date: 09/24/2002
Sound: DD5.1
Run Time: 93 Minutes
Flags: Adult Situations, Adult Language
Distributor/Studio: Miramax
Pete (
Adi Stein) is an eight-year-old Catholic boy growing up in the suburbs of Chicago in the mid-'70s.
Pete attends Catholic school, where as classes let out for the summer, he's admonished by a nun to follow the path of Lord, and not that of the Devil. Perhaps taking this message a bit too seriously,
Pete decides it's his goal for the summer to help someone get into heaven; having been told that Catholicism is the only sure path to the kingdom of the Lord,
Pete decides to convert a Jew to Catholicism in order to improve their standing in the afterlife. Hoping to find a likely candidate,
Pete begins visiting a nearby synagogue, where he gets to know
Rabbi Jacobson (
Kevin Pollack), who responds to
Pete's barrage of questions with good humor.
Pete also makes friends with
the Rabbi's son,
Danny (
Michael Weinberg), who is about the same age; when he learns that
Danny is seriously ill, he decides
Danny would be an excellent choice for conversion. When the priest at
Pete's church (
Brian Dennehy) informs
Pete that all will be tested before they pass the Pearly Gates, he sets up a mini-decathlon and puts
Danny in training as he attempts to reshape his spiritual thinking.
Pete's parents (
Bonnie Hunt and
Aidan Quinn) aren't sure just what to make of
Pete's new summer project, and as they become aquatinted with
Rabbi Jacobson, they share their perspectives on the unexpected trials of parenting.
Stolen Summer received more than its share of pre-release publicity; writer/director
Pete Jones' script was the winner in a nationwide screenwriting competition sponsored by producers
Ben Affleck and
Matt Damon, with
Miramax Pictures pledging a one-million-dollar budget and a theatrical release to the winning story. As part of the deal, the production of
Stolen Summer was documented by a film crew from the premium cable network
HBO, who aired a
documentary miniseries about the making of the film,
Project Greenlight.
~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide