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IMDbPro

Um Verão Especial

Título original: Stolen Summer
  • 2002
  • PG
  • 1 h 31 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
2,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Um Verão Especial (2002)
Trailer
Reproduzir trailer1:26
3 vídeos
28 fotos
Drama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA Catholic boy tries to convert a terminally ill Jewish boy, so he will be able to go to Heaven.A Catholic boy tries to convert a terminally ill Jewish boy, so he will be able to go to Heaven.A Catholic boy tries to convert a terminally ill Jewish boy, so he will be able to go to Heaven.

  • Direção
    • Pete Jones
  • Roteirista
    • Pete Jones
  • Artistas
    • Amara Balthrop-Lewis
    • Kevin Pollak
    • Aidan Quinn
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,5/10
    2,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Pete Jones
    • Roteirista
      • Pete Jones
    • Artistas
      • Amara Balthrop-Lewis
      • Kevin Pollak
      • Aidan Quinn
    • 55Avaliações de usuários
    • 25Avaliações da crítica
    • 36Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos3

    Stolen Summer
    Trailer 1:26
    Stolen Summer
    Stolen Summer
    Trailer 1:44
    Stolen Summer
    Stolen Summer
    Trailer 1:44
    Stolen Summer
    Stolen Summer
    Trailer 1:05
    Stolen Summer

    Fotos28

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    Elenco principal27

    Editar
    Amara Balthrop-Lewis
    • Carly
    Kevin Pollak
    Kevin Pollak
    • Rabbi Jacobsen
    Aidan Quinn
    Aidan Quinn
    • Joe O'Malley
    Bonnie Hunt
    Bonnie Hunt
    • Margaret O'Malley
    Eddie Kaye Thomas
    Eddie Kaye Thomas
    • Patrick O'Malley
    Lisa Dodson
    • Mrs. Jacobsen
    Mike Weinberg
    Mike Weinberg
    • Danny Jacobsen
    Adi Stein
    • Pete O'Malley
    Brian Dennehy
    Brian Dennehy
    • Father Kelly
    Peggy Roeder
    Peggy Roeder
    • Sister Leonora Mary
    Martin Hughes
    • Jimmy
    Ryan Kelley
    Ryan Kelley
    • Seamus O'Malley
    Lindsay Light
    Lindsay Light
    • Katie O'Malley
    Will Malnati
    Will Malnati
    • Eddie O'Malley
    Kristie Kelley
    • Marie O'Malley
    Etel Billig
    • Esther
    John Gleeson Connolly
    John Gleeson Connolly
    • Roger O'Malley
    • (as John Connolly)
    John Sierros
    • Jack
    • Direção
      • Pete Jones
    • Roteirista
      • Pete Jones
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários55

    6,52.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    Buddy-51

    that rare film that deals with religion in America

    American films deal with all aspects of every day life: work, school, marriage, family, divorce, adolescence, sexuality, crime, alcoholism, drugs, disease, death - the range of subjects is virtually endless. Yet if you were to look to films to get some sense of what defines American culture, you would never know that religion played any kind of role at all in the lives of the common, ordinary citizen. Spirituality seems to be the one aspect of life that never gets acknowledged even by the most incisive of filmmakers. Of course, we do occasionally run across the serial killer who claims to be doing `the Lord's work' as he's butchering his victims, or the diabolical Catholic Church hierarchy plotting the deaths of hundreds to maintain its nefarious hold on its riches and power, or the sleazy evangelist who is out there bilking millions out of their life savings in exchange for a phony one way ticket to eternal glory. But we almost never see just plain garden-variety folks who go to church, value their faith and try to make their religion an intricate part of their workaday lives. Why is that?

    Well, `Stolen Summer' is that rare American film which actually acknowledges that religion plays a key role in many people's lives. It's Chicago, 1976, and 8-year old Pete O'Malley, fearful of going to hell, is on a quest to assure his place in heaven by converting neighborhood Jews to the Christian faith. As part of his effort, he enlists the aid of a local rabbi who, admiring Pete's honesty and willingness to seek for Truth, agrees to let the boy set up a lemonade-cum-salvation stand outside his temple. The film deals with a wide array of characters, including members of Pete's family as well as the rabbi's, who have varying reactions to both Pete's stated goal and the burgeoning friendship between Pete and the rabbi's own son.

    `Stolen Summer' is not afraid to confront the sectarian nature of religion that is often used as a means of dividing people of faith rather than bringing them together. Moreover, by viewing the world through the unfiltered eyes of these two innocent young boys, writer/director Pete Jones points up the empty ritualism that often defines how we adults choose to practice our faith. Pete and Danny, by cutting through the layers of nonsense and getting to the simple heart of the matter, force many of the grownups in the film to re-evaluate their own beliefs and practices.

    It's also nice to see a family in a film that, although it has problems, is not thoroughly angst-ridden and dysfunctional. The O'Malley's are an intact Irish Catholic family whose eight children are a clear testament to the couple's adherence to papal decrees on birth control. In an excellent, multi-layered performance, Aidan Quinn plays Pete's father, Joe, a hard-working fireman who is proud of his ethnic roots and who feels that the most important role for a man in this world is to take care of his family. Yet, Joe has problems of his own. For one thing, he has an excessive sense of pride that prevents him from wanting his children to have a better life than the one he has made for them. He believes that his college-aged son should be content to work as a dutiful civil servant rather than pursue his dream of becoming a doctor. Moreover, Joe obviously fears what he doesn't know or understand and this comes out in subtle flashes of anti-Semitism, which put him in direct conflict with the rabbi and even his own son at times. Joe is, in many ways, the most interesting character in the film mainly because Jones is careful not to peg him as either a total hero or total villain. Bonnie Hunt and Kevin Pollack offer strong support as Joe's levelheaded wife and the open-minded rabbi, respectively. And young Adiel Stein scores big time as the centerpiece of the film, little Pete O'Malley. Stein conveys an upbeat childlike innocence that is infectious without becoming cutesy or cloying. He is utterly believable as a young boy coming-of-age in a suburban home in the 1970's.

    `Stolen Summer,' because it deals gently with its people and its subject matter, may strike some as a bit too mild in tone, a bit too lacking in grit to be worth very much. And, in a sense, they may be right. The film does sometimes come off a bit like one of those `good for you' After School Specials designed to deliver an upbeat, heartwarming message about the goodness of mankind without unduly upsetting anyone in the audience. And the movie does feel a bit contrived at times, more concerned with wringing tears or teaching a lesson than it is in capturing life in its rawest form for all of us to see. But no matter. It's still a pleasure to see a film at least attempting to acknowledge both that people do think about religion and God from time to time in this world and that we all don't come from families torn asunder by personal trauma. Yes, one could perhaps wish for a bit more edginess at times - still, `Stolen Summer' merits praise for bringing religion back into the mainstream of American movies.
    7johnsaucier1977

    Project GreenLight strikes gold

    Despite what you may have seen on project greenlight that would depict this film as a film that was not put together well and full of problems, it's not. This film is one of those rare films that invokes some feeling and those are always good in my book. Whether you have or haven't heard of project greenlight, rent this film.
    7mixiallen

    Heartfelt but Lacking

    This movie was a wonderful movie until the last ten minutes when it falls completely flat on its face. The movie examines the unique and heartfelt friendship between the young son of an angry Irish Catholic and the young son of a Jewish Rabbi. Not only are the characters deeply explored, their differing faiths are thoughtfully examined throughout the film. It's a shame that the "powers that be" had to fold in the last ten minutes and give viewers bogus wishy-washy so-called theology that proves moviemakers are still afraid of moral absolutes. What a shame. Bonnie Hunt was so convincing as the dutiful wife and loving mother I wanted to adopt her. Kevin Pollak was incredible as the agonized father living with terminal illness.
    steelman1-1

    A Tremendous First Effort

    I just viewed Stolen Summer on DVD and this is a fine film for a first-time director. I am an avid movie watcher who likes everything from Kubrick to Kurosawa to Tarkovsky and it is easy to recognize that Pete Jones has incredible potential as a writer and filmmaker.

    A touching story that was well acted, edited and paced. Even the child acting was fairly good. This was a very solid effort for a first-time feature on a tight budget.

    Kevin Pollak is a very underrated actor.

    Nice job all the way around! I hope we get to see more of Pete's stuff in the future.. it should be worth it.
    5johnnyboyz

    We try to like it and are dared to love it, but the film lacks any sort of bite or edge on the mature issues it takes on to be a success.

    Stolen Summer is all coy piano music; character arcs we anticipate and flimsy narrative frameworks that wouldn't necessarily feel out of place in a television movie. Hark, then we spot that the film was actually the result of a television programme; a show set up by endowed Hollywood acting royalty in the form of Ben Affleck and Matt Damon and designed to get independent films off the ground when they wouldn't ordinarily see the light of day – the sentiment a whole lot better than the end product, while somewhat tellingly, the show has hardly flourished since. Much like the film that was a result of it, the experiment was done with the best of intentions although ultimately came out a little flat. Stolen Summer is very much the sort of piece that possesses the capability of attracting great criticism, but it isn't necessarily one of those films one particularly takes pleasure from criticising; you root for it from its humble beginnings right the way through to its, albeit relatively phony, climax, but all the while willing it on to pull away from tepid foundations and spiritless crucibles so as to widen out into a broader; more inspiring, surprising realm. Alas, it doesn't quite make it and if anything, comes close to rather annoying the viewer in the process.

    The film covers that of a Chicago based family in the summer of 1976; specifically, this family and their slow inception into varying religious realms through the presence of a local Jewish community whom come to have somewhat of an impact on them. The family, staunch Catholics named the O'Malley's, consist of an array of archetypes ranging from the hard-nosed and very masculine father; to the young son on the cusp of adulthood; to the much younger infant son stuck in there amidst the oft-worried housewife/mother whom essentially functions as a voice of antagonism when she isn't required to remain anonymous. The father, a certain Joe (Quinn), is a firefighter but is a beer swilling; easily wound up guy whom enjoys a gamble with his colleagues at work, and lives for that sensation of working long; hard and manly hours in a physical job so that he may provide for a family he thus feels exists to be bossed about on account of this. Patrick (Kaye-Thomas), Joe's eldest son, is near-enough in his twenties; a softly spoken individual, wiry and not the pit-bull his father is - a person with the steady job of a lifeguard and imbuing characteristics that generally clash with that of his dad.

    The sweetest, and probably most substantial strand, covers that of Pete (Stein), who's the youngest of the family and a kid now out of his Catholic school given the summer holidays have begun. Pete has a confused outlook on the all of the world; life and most things around him; a boy with a fear of Hell, damnation and such recently instilled into him via the school, and thus sees himself as a bit of sinner or as someone going out of his way to avoid Godly retribution; so much so that he decides to dedicate the entire break to essentially repenting or trying to find redemption for a bad act he hasn't even done, something eventually forming into the encouraging of a certain young, local but terminally ill boy named Danny (Weinberg) to become Catholic. There is a telling moment on the eve of what Pete labels his "quest", an exchange between he and another boy playing baseball out there on a diamond; the large metallic fence surrounding the pitch and housing either boy on either side of it an indication of their separate sides: a physical splitting of how the respective children will spend their break, a divide surmising one boy and that of sports and leisure and another soul searching away from such things.

    Pete's proverbial quest for redemption syncs up nicely with Affleck's own off screen repenting, a pouring of the cash he most certainly made for the previous year's monstrosity Pearl Harbour into that of humbler; more rounded foundings. Upon undertaking the pilgrimage, Pete comes to discover alternate religions and eventually intermingles with the local Jewish community; initial ignorance encapsulated by his meagre Cynagog suggestions early on, which would make little sense to execute. Pete's eventual coming to bond with Danny sees this child's unfortunate disease loom over proceedings; the kid seriously ill enough to be in and out of chemotherapy and yet finds room to swim unenviable distances in what are perceived as "record times" whilst out at sea.

    Spinning around Pete's journey of self-discovery lies Joe's strand of being forced into confronting prejudices, a plot line to the film exuding degrees of obligatoriness and painfully highlighting its often languid, often standardised nature of rolling through the motions. It's here the film provides us with politics that are so firmly in the right place, that their entrenchment in such areas actually becomes a little grating. Stolen Summer very much feels like a machine that's just been oiled a little too well; it is often impassive and feels mostly processed, its cogs and wheels therein beautifully kept and working to such a pristine order that does not allow for a great deal of involved antagonism; does not allow for a great deal of ambiguity nor a great deal of blurring of anybody's morals. The piece very much the sort of film refusing to deviate from its grounded route, and it will at once both suffer and excel in its own peculiar ways to varying people as a result.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      This film was the result of Project Greenlight (2001), the first-time-director competition launched by Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Miramax, and was the subject of the HBO documentary of the same name, which aired in Winter 2002. The documentary revealed many behind-the-scenes snafus, which led to the mid-production firing of co-producer Jeff Balis.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Joe O'Malley and Patrick O'Malley are sitting together in the backyard, we see Patrick holding a beer. At the end of the scene, Patrick has no beer, and Joe is "ceremonially" handing him his first beer.
    • Citações

      Joe O'Malley: Baseball should be the only thing on an eight year old boy's mind.

    • Conexões
      Referenced in OWV Updates: Multimedia Update (08/01/2016) (2016)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      FRIEND
      Written by Rick Butler and Kristin Mooney

      Performed by Kristin Mooney

      Published by Hookmeister Music (ASCAP) and Moonward Music (ASCAP)

      Courtesy of Static Music

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is Stolen Summer?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 25 de julho de 2003 (Itália)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Em Busca do Céu
    • Locações de filme
      • Chicago, Illinois, EUA
    • Empresas de produção
      • All Nighter Inc.
      • LivePlanet
      • Miramax
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.800.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 134.736
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 61.613
      • 24 de mar. de 2002
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 163.348
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 31 min(91 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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