Summer of '42 (1971)

Rated:
.
Starring: Jennifer O'Neill, Gary Grimes.
Director: Robert Mulligan
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• Widescreen anamorphic format
Editorial
Reviews
Herman Raucher's
autobiographical (or first person, anyway) coming-of-age tale is set, as the
title suggests, among sand dunes and departing GIs. Hermie (Gary Grimes) and
his two buddies Oscar (Jerry Hauser) and the nerdy Benjie (Oliver Conant) are
spending the summer doing the things preadolescents do: hanging out, eating ice
cream, stealing "dirty" books from their parents, and trying
unsuccessfully to act manly around the gawky girls they take to the movies.
Then Hermie spoils everything by really falling in love, this time with the
adorable older woman Dorothy, played by Jennifer O'Neill. Dorothy's husband
conveniently leaves for duty overseas, and then, even more conveniently,
becomes one of those "we regret" telegrams. Dorothy, desperate for
comfort and sweetness, turns to Hermie--and surely makes his summer. The
setting and the date give this movie a double helping of nostalgia for anyone
who was once an adolescent boy desperately trying to get rid of both his
callowness and his virginity. But the slow pace and dreamy atmosphere, courtesy
of Robert Mulligan's direction and Michael Legrand's famous score, may give it
less appeal to anyone who is still in that situation. --Richard Farr
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