Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDuring their last days of summer and childhood -- the weekend before middle school begins -- four girls struggle with the harsh truths of growing up and embark on a mysterious adventure.During their last days of summer and childhood -- the weekend before middle school begins -- four girls struggle with the harsh truths of growing up and embark on a mysterious adventure.During their last days of summer and childhood -- the weekend before middle school begins -- four girls struggle with the harsh truths of growing up and embark on a mysterious adventure.
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This movie is just wrong, in so many levels.
I understand that the aim might have been to create something deep and maybe even meaningful, but to me this is an illustration of lack of emotional depth, at no point were the children taking responsibility for the things they did and none of them showed any empathy or emotional depth - it felt like 4 pre-teenage sociopaths roaming around. Is that what friendship looks like to the writer?
How about we show them what empathy and taking responsibility for our actions looks like?
Who is the target audience to this picture, I saw some review saying they watched it with their kids, I hope you were telling them how it works in real world and how to differentiate right from wrong.
I understand that the aim might have been to create something deep and maybe even meaningful, but to me this is an illustration of lack of emotional depth, at no point were the children taking responsibility for the things they did and none of them showed any empathy or emotional depth - it felt like 4 pre-teenage sociopaths roaming around. Is that what friendship looks like to the writer?
How about we show them what empathy and taking responsibility for our actions looks like?
Who is the target audience to this picture, I saw some review saying they watched it with their kids, I hope you were telling them how it works in real world and how to differentiate right from wrong.
Clunky, aimless and extremely try hard in eliciting any emotion. Everything is so obvious and well trodden and treated better in other far superior films of a similar ilk. Themes and situations are picked up, dropped and left unexplored in order to move on to another clichéd situation ad nauseum. Saw this as a Cineworld Unlimited advance screening and I believe it is an example of using the service to get people through the door to see an otherwise inessential and rather vacuous film. Some films I see and they make my love of films grow and I think 'I want to see ALL the films!'
Films like this leave me thinking 'Films aren't all that great'
Originally Premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival in the Sundance Kids Selection.
"Summering" focuses on four best friends on the brink of starting middle school realize their lives are about to change forever. On the last weekend of summer, they set out to make the most of it. James Ponsoldt had a promising career with his directing films. Off the Black was a decent debut project, Smashed and The Spectacular Now were amazing and touching, and The End of the Tour was pretty good. But The Circle was a mess of a film and it felt like Ponsoldt threw away his talent in that project. I was hoping Summering would be a much better film.
I really wanted to like this, but unfortunately it really feels sloppy. Summering has good intentions as it's about a coming of age story. Girlhood, friendship and on the verge to encounter the harsh parts of reality. Ponsoldt shows his passion for this project but the story itself feels really all over the place. The main core itself felt like there were many themes and concepts trying to be put together and it makes it a mess since the film doesn't really focus on it's themes as much as it wanted too. It tries to be a mix of comedy, coming of age drama, some spooky elements and such. While some concepts did work out, as an overall story, it feels sloppy and it felt like Ponsoldt had too many ideas in one.
"Summering" does have some pros. The production and set designs does have a nostalgic feel to it. The colorful backgrounds and presentations helps to create a 80s, 90s or early 2000s feel of growing up. The performances from the cast were mediocre. Nobody had a terrible performance and they did their best to play their characters. However the dialogue does drag the performances because the words spoken from the child actors felt like words written by an adult and it makes the film unrealistic. There was certain parts where I thought that the words that were spoken was so unrealistic that no child would ever speak that way.
The characters themselves weren't as interesting to connect with and the film really feels like a tone down version of Stand By Me. It's a shame because Ponsoldt had a promising career but unfortunately he hasn't improved much from his last disaster "The Circle". The soundtrack wasn't great, the pacing could be improved and the execution was bland for the most part.
Ponsoldt wasn't able to create a good film here and it ends up becoming forgettable by the end of the day. It's no doubt there is good intentions in this movie but there is still a lot to improve for the story. Young children may enjoy this film but I would recommend The Sandlot, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Way, Way Back or The Kings of Summer for a better coming of age movie.
Rating: D+
"Summering" focuses on four best friends on the brink of starting middle school realize their lives are about to change forever. On the last weekend of summer, they set out to make the most of it. James Ponsoldt had a promising career with his directing films. Off the Black was a decent debut project, Smashed and The Spectacular Now were amazing and touching, and The End of the Tour was pretty good. But The Circle was a mess of a film and it felt like Ponsoldt threw away his talent in that project. I was hoping Summering would be a much better film.
I really wanted to like this, but unfortunately it really feels sloppy. Summering has good intentions as it's about a coming of age story. Girlhood, friendship and on the verge to encounter the harsh parts of reality. Ponsoldt shows his passion for this project but the story itself feels really all over the place. The main core itself felt like there were many themes and concepts trying to be put together and it makes it a mess since the film doesn't really focus on it's themes as much as it wanted too. It tries to be a mix of comedy, coming of age drama, some spooky elements and such. While some concepts did work out, as an overall story, it feels sloppy and it felt like Ponsoldt had too many ideas in one.
"Summering" does have some pros. The production and set designs does have a nostalgic feel to it. The colorful backgrounds and presentations helps to create a 80s, 90s or early 2000s feel of growing up. The performances from the cast were mediocre. Nobody had a terrible performance and they did their best to play their characters. However the dialogue does drag the performances because the words spoken from the child actors felt like words written by an adult and it makes the film unrealistic. There was certain parts where I thought that the words that were spoken was so unrealistic that no child would ever speak that way.
The characters themselves weren't as interesting to connect with and the film really feels like a tone down version of Stand By Me. It's a shame because Ponsoldt had a promising career but unfortunately he hasn't improved much from his last disaster "The Circle". The soundtrack wasn't great, the pacing could be improved and the execution was bland for the most part.
Ponsoldt wasn't able to create a good film here and it ends up becoming forgettable by the end of the day. It's no doubt there is good intentions in this movie but there is still a lot to improve for the story. Young children may enjoy this film but I would recommend The Sandlot, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Way, Way Back or The Kings of Summer for a better coming of age movie.
Rating: D+
Greetings again from the darkness. Obviously, I was never a young girl fretting over the first year of middle school, and I would venture a guess that neither were writer-director James Ponsoldt or co-writer Benjamin Percy. The reason for this point is that this is a story of four girls in this situation, as well as the stress their actions load on their four mothers. Ponsoldt and Percy make this an observational story, rather than a personal one ... a significant point of difference for a film like this. I had agreed to review the film based on being a huge fan of Mr. Ponsoldt's 2013 film, THE SPECTACULAR NOW, but while that one was adapted from a novel, this current film is an original, and it lacks the depth and refinement of that previous gem ... despite some decent acting from the cast, young and older.
Daisy (Lia Barnett), Lola (Sanai Victoria), Dena (Madalen Mills), and Mari (Eden Grace Redfield) are best friends frittering away the last few days of summer by hanging out the way young kids used to. There are no scheduled soccer practices and no structured piano lessons, only (mostly) unsupervised freedom to explore and live the moments that make up a day. The mothers (Lake Bell, Megan Mullaly, Sarah Cooper, Ashley Madekwe) are normal moms - carrying the burden of parenthood, work, and self-identity. They care for their daughters very much, despite one of them spending most of her non-working hours in an alcohol and divorce-induced sleep mode, oblivious to the comings and goings of her kid.
The film has a terrific start. We see the girls simply enjoying being around each other and sharing their concerns for the upcoming school year. This segment seems very natural and realistic. We immediately pick up on their personalities. Daisy is reserved and longs to be noticed. Lola is spiritually connected and will be the guiding force for an activity later in the story. Dena is quite smart and grounded in reality, while Mari frets over wearing a skirt to Catholic school. The friends banter about their uncertain future and the conversation drifts and bounces, just as we'd expect.
Things change quickly as the girls head to "Terabithia", their secret spot off the beaten path. It's here where they discover the body of an adult man who seemingly jumped from "Suicide Bridge" above. It's at this point where we realize this is a girl version of Rob Reiner's classic STAND BY ME (1986). Only that's not what happens. Instead, we are subjected to a Nancy Drew knock-off where the girls attempt to solve the case as they wax philosophically about growing older. Almost nothing works from this point onward. We don't really get to better understand each of the girls, and significant time is spent on their mothers' reactions. Ghosts appear, while dads are presented in unfavorable light. The narration is heavy-handed, and what started with the theme of 'anything is possible during summer', leaves us with clunky dialogue and very little insight to pre-middle school girls.
Opening in theaters on August 12, 2022.
Daisy (Lia Barnett), Lola (Sanai Victoria), Dena (Madalen Mills), and Mari (Eden Grace Redfield) are best friends frittering away the last few days of summer by hanging out the way young kids used to. There are no scheduled soccer practices and no structured piano lessons, only (mostly) unsupervised freedom to explore and live the moments that make up a day. The mothers (Lake Bell, Megan Mullaly, Sarah Cooper, Ashley Madekwe) are normal moms - carrying the burden of parenthood, work, and self-identity. They care for their daughters very much, despite one of them spending most of her non-working hours in an alcohol and divorce-induced sleep mode, oblivious to the comings and goings of her kid.
The film has a terrific start. We see the girls simply enjoying being around each other and sharing their concerns for the upcoming school year. This segment seems very natural and realistic. We immediately pick up on their personalities. Daisy is reserved and longs to be noticed. Lola is spiritually connected and will be the guiding force for an activity later in the story. Dena is quite smart and grounded in reality, while Mari frets over wearing a skirt to Catholic school. The friends banter about their uncertain future and the conversation drifts and bounces, just as we'd expect.
Things change quickly as the girls head to "Terabithia", their secret spot off the beaten path. It's here where they discover the body of an adult man who seemingly jumped from "Suicide Bridge" above. It's at this point where we realize this is a girl version of Rob Reiner's classic STAND BY ME (1986). Only that's not what happens. Instead, we are subjected to a Nancy Drew knock-off where the girls attempt to solve the case as they wax philosophically about growing older. Almost nothing works from this point onward. We don't really get to better understand each of the girls, and significant time is spent on their mothers' reactions. Ghosts appear, while dads are presented in unfavorable light. The narration is heavy-handed, and what started with the theme of 'anything is possible during summer', leaves us with clunky dialogue and very little insight to pre-middle school girls.
Opening in theaters on August 12, 2022.
We all know what it's like to face change and challenges. And we always desire the best possible outcome from a predicament. Summering tells a relatable story about young girls finding their way through a challenge, while delivering a distinctive storyline.
Summering focuses on four best friends Dina (Madalen Mills), Lola (Sanai Victoria), Mari (Eden Grace Redfield), and Daisy (Lia Barnett) who are about to start middle school. With that comes plenty of questions and new challenges. On the weekend before school starts, the girls find themselves embarking on a peculiar adventure. These four best friends must work together to find the answer to their mystery and prepare for this new chapter in their lives.
Even though the characters in Summering are facing a fictional and fantasy-like situation, the plot is still somewhat relatable. These four best friends have to explore themselves and find out who they really are as they are growing older. They know that it is best to go on this journey together, but they worry about what obstacles will get in the way. Dina, Lola, Mari and Daisy also all have specific issues present in their life, making their friendships even more crucial. Anybody that is going through significant changes, no matter if they are young or old, can find something applicable to their lives in this story. The plot of Summering does seem a bit incomplete and choppy at certain parts of the film-the main mystery and conflict aren't really resolved which can leave viewers confused after watching. The background music of the film is particularly interesting as it matches the tone of the film and the events taking place in the scenes. Summering has a darker style, and the dark music compliments that-"props" to Drum & Lace for providing this high-quality soundtrack.
The message of Summering is that a lot of times opposites attract. Dina, Lola, Mari, and Daisy need each other to balance themselves out. Each brings something different to the friend group, ultimately bringing them all closer together.
I give Summering 3.5 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 12 to 18. This film has minimal mild language and a middle school to high school demographic would enjoy it. By Maica N., KIDS FIRST!
Summering focuses on four best friends Dina (Madalen Mills), Lola (Sanai Victoria), Mari (Eden Grace Redfield), and Daisy (Lia Barnett) who are about to start middle school. With that comes plenty of questions and new challenges. On the weekend before school starts, the girls find themselves embarking on a peculiar adventure. These four best friends must work together to find the answer to their mystery and prepare for this new chapter in their lives.
Even though the characters in Summering are facing a fictional and fantasy-like situation, the plot is still somewhat relatable. These four best friends have to explore themselves and find out who they really are as they are growing older. They know that it is best to go on this journey together, but they worry about what obstacles will get in the way. Dina, Lola, Mari and Daisy also all have specific issues present in their life, making their friendships even more crucial. Anybody that is going through significant changes, no matter if they are young or old, can find something applicable to their lives in this story. The plot of Summering does seem a bit incomplete and choppy at certain parts of the film-the main mystery and conflict aren't really resolved which can leave viewers confused after watching. The background music of the film is particularly interesting as it matches the tone of the film and the events taking place in the scenes. Summering has a darker style, and the dark music compliments that-"props" to Drum & Lace for providing this high-quality soundtrack.
The message of Summering is that a lot of times opposites attract. Dina, Lola, Mari, and Daisy need each other to balance themselves out. Each brings something different to the friend group, ultimately bringing them all closer together.
I give Summering 3.5 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 12 to 18. This film has minimal mild language and a middle school to high school demographic would enjoy it. By Maica N., KIDS FIRST!
Você sabia?
- Trilhas sonorasWithout You
Written by Austin Garrick, Bronwyn Griffin, Ezra Reich, Nicholas Johns
Performed by Electric Youth
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- How long is Summering?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 57.770
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 32.850
- 14 de ago. de 2022
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 64.369
- Tempo de duração1 hora 25 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.39 : 1
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