Featuring a simple, lighthearted story, the 2020 film Summer Rebels has all the right ingredients to deliver an enjoyable experience in front of the screen. Curiously enough, the straightforwardness of the plot is what wins the viewer over.
It’s a story revolving around eleven-year-old Jonas (Elias Vyskocil) and his adventures during an unusual summer vacation. The boy is used to spending his holidays in Slovakia, with his father and grandfather, enjoying rafting and fishing in the local river.
But everything changed when his father died. The family moves to Germany, and Jonas’s mother is not enthusiastic about letting her son spend a Slovakian vacation. Determined to enjoy the summer, the boy rebels and runs away from home, catching a train to his beloved grandad. Upon arrival, however, Jonas finds that things have also changed there.

An exceptional casting
Much of the film’s appeal is due to its exceptional casting. Elias Vyskocil, as Jonas, is present in just about every scene. His cheeky expressions (often emphasized with long close-up shots), boyish smirks, and ability to portray a wide range of emotions significantly boost his character’s sympathy factor. His sidekick Alex, a tomboyish girl, played by Liana Pavlikova, is equally talented. While her role is a supporting one, the interaction between the two is a joy to watch. That interaction establishes friendship as one of the prominent motifs of the narrative.

The musical score
The musical score is another strong point of the film as it sets a real brisk and fun tone with a unique selection of songs that have lyrics matching the events on-screen (mainly in English and German).
With its first-rate cinematography characterized by vivid colors, great framing, and modern editing techniques, the filmmakers have captured the essence of childhood and summer adventures.
An easy-going children’s film
Summer Rebels is essentially an easy-going children’s film, without much drama or manipulative emotions tied to its story. Per se, a few things could have been better explored – such as a potential romance (as first-love is so frequently addressed in Coming-of-Age cinema) or the relationship between Jonas and his late father. Yet it is also possible that the film manages to keep the lightness of its narrative precisely because the story remains vague — just a simple but heartwarming summer adventure.

Trailer for Summer Rebels (2020)




Eric Tessier‘s 2012 French Canadian film The Pee-Wee 3D: The Winter That Changed My Life (2012) is an inspirational sport themed Coming-of-Age film. It follows the story of Janeau Trudel (Antoine Olivier Pilon), a 12-year-old hockey prodigy who moves to a new city with his dad following his mother’s tragic death. Janeau meets the overly confident and determined Julie (Alice Morel-Michaud), who convinces him to join the local junior hockey in which she is a goalie.




The Pee-Wee 3D: The Winter That Changed My Life offers a glimpse into the world of junior hockey but, thanks to its universal messages, one doesn’t have to be an aficionado of this particular sport to enjoy its story. In fact, the film’s story is going to be adapted in France with Handball instead of Hockey — showing the universal nature of the plot.

The Perfect Game follows the story of a group of boys from the small industrial town of Monterrey, Mexico. They dream big of travelling to America and playing in the Little League World Series (baseball) one day. When a former employee of the St. Louis Cardinals moves back home to Monterrey, the boys attempt to enlist him as their coach for Monterrey’s first Little League team.
Interpersonal relationships can be complicated, even if they are between siblings. Robert Eggers‘s 2015 short film Brothers manages to turn a conflictive family relationship into an atmospheric Coming-of-Age drama. The story’s tension rises in a slow yet consistent manner as one observes the interaction between the two brothers and their autocratic grandmother.


Depression, abandonment, and compassion are the main themes of Vardis Marinakis‘s film Zizotec. Visualizing unorthodox childhood experiences could have turned the film into a splendid Coming-of-Age tale had the filmmakers managed to combine the superb acting of the cast with a better-written script. What starts as a family drama morphs into a fairy-tale-like story by the final scene – making the whole story feel like a prequel of another film.



Little Big Voice is set in Austria in 1955. It’s a moving story of a ten-year-old boy, Ben (Wainde Wane), who, after his mother’s death, tries to fulfill his dreams in post-war Europe – in the face of many obstacles.






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