Stealing Home is a 1988 American coming of age romantic drama film written and directed by Steven Kampmann and William Porter (billed as Will Aldis). The film stars Mark Harmon, Blair Brown, Jonathan Silverman, Harold Ramis, William McNamara, and Jodie Foster. The movie focuses on a failed baseball player, Billy Wyatt, who discovers that his childhood sweetheart, Katie Chandler, has died by suicide. Billy must confront the past via reminiscence and nostalgia, while also dealing with grief, as he embarks on a journey to fulfill one of Katie's last wishes; that he spread her ashes.
Stealing Home | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Steven Kampmann William Porter (as Will Aldis) |
Written by | Steven Kampmann William Porter (as Will Aldis) |
Produced by | Chana Ben-Dov Hank Moonjean Thom Mount |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Bobby Byrne |
Edited by | Antony Gibbs |
Music by | David Foster |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
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Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $8 million |
Box office | $7.46 million |
Stealing Home was released theatrically on August 26, 1988 by Warner Bros. Upon release the film was a critical and commercial failure, although David Foster's musical score garnered universal praise. Since its release, with television reruns, and DVD releases, the film has attained cult classic status, praised by audiences for its melancholic and nostalgic themes, performances, and musical score.
In the 1980s, Billy Wyatt is a thirty-something washed up baseball player living out of a hotel with a cocktail waitress. One afternoon he receives a phone call from his mother, telling him his close childhood friend Katie Chandler has died by suicide.
Flashbacks to the '60s show Billy and Katie's relationship. She was a slightly older neighborhood girl who babysat him for the Wyatts, who were best friends with the Chandlers. Katie mentors young Billy, giving him advice on girls and dating. As he ages he begins to develop feelings for her, and she reciprocates.
Just after Billy graduates high school, his father Sam dies in a car accident. Two months later Katie, Billy, Ginny, and Billy's friend Alan Appleby decide to go back to their summer home "Seasmoke" for the summer as they have done every year, the first without Billy's dad. As summer approaches its end, Billy feels Katie is encouraging his mother to live more freely too soon, and he has a shouting match with her.
The next day at sunrise, Billy goes to Katie for forgiveness, and they spend the rest of the weekend together at Seasmoke. As the weekend draws to a close, Katie asks Billy to pursue his passion for baseball, and to retrieve the baseball necklace pendant from the girl to whom he lost his virginity to just months before. Walking slowly away, she turns and says "I love you Billy boy". The older Billy remembers that was the last time he saw her.
In the present, Katie's father Hank visits the Wyatt family to share the bad news. He recounts how he drove to Seasmoke to check on an upset Katie after her second divorce, and found her body curled up in her bed. "She looked like a little girl sleeping." Katie's wishes are for Billy to be responsible for her ashes, confident he would be the only person to know what to do with them.
Billy reunites with Appleby and they engage in a night of reminiscing and carousing while driving around in Katie's car with her ashes, trying to figure out what to do with them. Suddenly, Billy recalls Katie telling him her fantasy that she could jump off the pier and fly free with the birds. The next morning, Billy goes to the pier, runs down the dock and tosses her ashes just the way she described in her fantasy.
Billy joins a minor league baseball team; taking pride in grooming the field each morning before a game. The film ends with Billy, his girlfriend, and Appleby celebrating after a game that he won by "stealing home" (the same thing he did in the last game he played the day his father died).
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The film plot is set in the Philadelphia area and the New Jersey shore. The filming occurred in many locations:
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Stealing Home" | David Foster | David Foster | 3:35 |
2. | "Sherry" | Bob Gaudio | The Four Seasons | 2:30 |
3. | "And When She Danced (Love Theme From Stealing Home)" |
| David Foster & Marilyn Martin | 3:50 |
4. | "Poison Ivy" |
| The Nylons | 3:21 |
5. | "All I Have To Do Is Dream" | Boudleaux Bryant | The Everly Brothers | 2:20 |
6. | "Home Movies" | David Foster | David Foster | 2:10 |
7. | "Great Balls Of Fire" | Jerry Lee Lewis | 1:50 | |
8. | "Baby It's You" |
| The Shirelles | 2:38 |
9. | "Stealing Home (Reprise)" | David Foster | David Foster | 5:08 |
10. | "Bo Diddley" | Ellas McDaniel | Bo Diddley | 2:19 |
11. | "Katie's Theme" | David Foster | David Foster | 1:30 |
Total length: | 31:11 |
The film received negative reviews around the time of its release. In her review for the New York Times, Janet Maslin wrote, "The era is simply established as a dreamily idyllic past, thanks to sand dunes at twilight, waves that crash in the distance, shiny red convertibles without seat belts and a musical score that may make you want to weep, for all the wrong reasons".[1] In his one-star review for the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert wrote, "I detested Stealing Home so much, from beginning to end, that I left the screening wondering if any movie could possibly be that bad".[2] On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 20% based on reviews from 10 critics.[3]
When asked about the film in 2006, Mark Harmon said, "That was about a bunch of actors loving a script, going there and burning it on both ends for five weeks just to get it done. That was a fun one to make. I hear a lot about that role. People really found that movie on video."[4]
Ever since the release of Summer of '42, Warner Bros. has attempted to buy back the rights to the film, which they sold to author Herman Raucher in lieu of paying him for the script, under the belief that the film would not be financially successful. Stealing Home was greenlit shortly after Raucher denied their latest attempt to purchase the rights, leading to Summer star Jennifer O'Neill's assertion that Stealing Home was "stolen" from Summer. Regardless, she said that she enjoyed the film and called it a "lovely film."[5] Rita Kempley, in her review for the Washington Post, also saw similarities with Summer, describing the film as a "pale comedy-drama by mediocrities Steven Kampmann and Will Aldis. Admittedly a pastiche of their memories, the movie bespeaks the dust of '60s yearbooks and greeting card sentiment. Of course, that stuff can be touching (Summer of '42) or quirky (Gregory's Girl), but here only allergy sufferers will leave with soggy Kleenex."[6]