Good
Will Stunting
Matt and Ben pick a predictable, maudlin project
to Greenlight.
Since the salary of a film reviewer doesn't
usually allow for luxuries such as HBO, especially in a region that charges
almost $50 for basic cable, you're not going to read much herein about Project
Greenlight, the Matt Damon/Ben Affleck-produced reality series that
selected one script to be filmed on a million-dollar budget and have its making
documented over 13 episodes. Suffice it to say that whatever problems Stolen
Summer may have encountered during production, it doesn't feel like the
disjointed outcome of a troubled shoot. For better or worse -- plenty of both,
in fact -- it's a movie that has a coherent vision. It's a shame that vision
just doesn't happen to be very interesting.
Should
that really surprise anyone? Only if you start to confuse Matt Damon with the
genius he played in Good Will Hunting or think that Ben Affleck, star of
Initially
narrated (badly) by its child star, Adi Stein, Stolen Summer lines up
all its ducks in a row at the very beginning, with its tale of young Pete
O'Malley (Stein), an Irish Catholic lad growing up in 1976
Naturally,
there has to be a cute contrivance to kick things in gear, and in this case,
it's that Pete, fear-struck that the slightest misdeed will send him to hell,
decides to redeem himself during the summer break by converting a Jew to Jesus.
With the permission of the mildly bemused Rabbi Jacobsen (Kevin Pollak), he
sets up a lemonade stand outside the local synagogue offering free trips to
heaven. When the rabbi informs him that Jews actually do believe in heaven, but
that it involves a little more waiting, Pete naturally assumes that there may
be folks who don't want to wait. Jacobsen's happy that the boy is at least
thinking about such things, but his wife accuses him of pandering to the
Catholics.
After
the rabbi's house catches fire, possibly as the result of anti-Semitic arson (a
topic the movie hints at only to promptly ignore), killing the synagogue
secretary and very nearly taking the life of Jacobsen's young son Danny (Mike
Weinberg), Pete decides that Danny will be the perfect target for conversion.
Not knowing quite how to convert, however, Pete takes a tip from Olympic hero
Bruce Jenner and devises a decathlon-type series of events that will ensure
Danny gets to heaven. Danny is, in fact, closer to heaven than is initially
apparent -- he has leukemia. Care to guess how all this will end?
Yet, despite some very predictable melodrama,
one or two poorly staged confrontation scenes and a horribly maudlin and
intrusive score by Danny Lux -- a TV composer for the likes of NYPD Blue
and Ally McBeal making his feature scoring debut -- there is merit to
this project. Much as Monster's Ball's poor direction was partially
redeemed by good performances, writer-director Pete Jones' adequate staging and
contrived script nonetheless serve as the backdrop to stellar performances by
Pollak, often underrated as a mere comedian, and Quinn, usually cast in more
one-dimensional versions of the drunk dad role he plays here. As his wife,
Bonnie Hunt deserves credit for giving Quinn a strong leading lady to play off
of. Young leads Stein and Weinberg may have unbearably precocious dialogue and
a forced storyline to contend with, but their chemistry is quite effective.
You'll hate yourself for misting up at their predicaments when it's so clear
that you're being aggressively corralled in that direction, but manipulation or
not, chances are you'll feel something.