IMDb RATING
5.8/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
With nowhere left to go, Will Hawkins finds himself at camp for the first time. His instinct is to run, but he finds a friend, a father figure, and even a girl who awakens his heart. Most of... Read allWith nowhere left to go, Will Hawkins finds himself at camp for the first time. His instinct is to run, but he finds a friend, a father figure, and even a girl who awakens his heart. Most of all, he finally finds a home.With nowhere left to go, Will Hawkins finds himself at camp for the first time. His instinct is to run, but he finds a friend, a father figure, and even a girl who awakens his heart. Most of all, he finally finds a home.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Featured reviews
So refreshing to see something that the whole family can watch. Love the remakes of the songs from Amy Grant, Audio Adrenaline, Michael W Smith, and Steven Curtis Chapman. Great performance by Bailee Madison!
Will hit rock bottom when he had the choice to either go to camp or to.youth detention center. There he found friendship, love and God and family. When he first got to camp he didn't want to be there but the longer he was there the more he actually liked it. This movie might be a little cheesy but it's better than the 1 star ratings some are giving it.
What happens when you mix Camp Rock, High school musical with a little religion? A dramatic musical film for Christian teens.
It is about a rebellious boy who has the option of going to a camp or ending up in the reformatory.
Quality.
The songs although generic some others are interesting.
Not all performances are at the level.
At times the story can feel a bit lazy and meaningless, it falls into all the hackneyed camp movie stuff as well as teenage characters. You can even feel a romantic comedy.
The message he gives is clear: be yourself and give love. It is the basis of the film, in the end without love the world cannot.
About opportunities in life and trusting God.
It raises interesting questions about God and life, but many of them are not fully answered.
If you ever went to a religious camp, this movie will make you feel identified.
Sunday.
It is about a rebellious boy who has the option of going to a camp or ending up in the reformatory.
Quality.
The songs although generic some others are interesting.
Not all performances are at the level.
At times the story can feel a bit lazy and meaningless, it falls into all the hackneyed camp movie stuff as well as teenage characters. You can even feel a romantic comedy.
The message he gives is clear: be yourself and give love. It is the basis of the film, in the end without love the world cannot.
About opportunities in life and trusting God.
It raises interesting questions about God and life, but many of them are not fully answered.
If you ever went to a religious camp, this movie will make you feel identified.
Sunday.
Troublesome orphan Will Hawkins (Kevin Quinn) is on his last chance. He's set to go to group home until foster parent Kristin (Sherri Shepherd) volunteers to take him in. Only he has to join her and her son George at a Christian camp run by David (David Koechner). Immediately, he falls for sweetie Avery (Bailee Madison).
This Christian film is trying to be a Disney TV musical. It's not the worst idea but the first half is a dud. The lead kid is written as a prankster troublemaker but he's played like a lightweight. At most, he's lying to get the girl. He doesn't even try to run away as his first move. He's bland until the second half. Along with the movie in general, it gets better in the second half. The first half is a boring version of High School Musical. Will and Avery don't even get a good meet-cute. Their first meeting is a perfunctory love-at-first-sight moment which turns immediately to a big musical. It's a meet-perfunctory. It's not until 45 minutes when the couple has a good one-on-one heart-to-heart. From that moment on, the movie improves markedly. They even have their first good song by the campfire and they let their God flag fly. It's like the movie decides to land all the big punches at once. If Will is more of a brigand earlier, his character could have a bigger arc. If the Christianity gets let loose sooner, it could set up the internal religious conflict better. If Will and Avery have more moments quicker, they could have more punch in their emotional drama. Bailee Madison could eat up those Emmy moments if she's released. The first half is a missed opportunity.
This Christian film is trying to be a Disney TV musical. It's not the worst idea but the first half is a dud. The lead kid is written as a prankster troublemaker but he's played like a lightweight. At most, he's lying to get the girl. He doesn't even try to run away as his first move. He's bland until the second half. Along with the movie in general, it gets better in the second half. The first half is a boring version of High School Musical. Will and Avery don't even get a good meet-cute. Their first meeting is a perfunctory love-at-first-sight moment which turns immediately to a big musical. It's a meet-perfunctory. It's not until 45 minutes when the couple has a good one-on-one heart-to-heart. From that moment on, the movie improves markedly. They even have their first good song by the campfire and they let their God flag fly. It's like the movie decides to land all the big punches at once. If Will is more of a brigand earlier, his character could have a bigger arc. If the Christianity gets let loose sooner, it could set up the internal religious conflict better. If Will and Avery have more moments quicker, they could have more punch in their emotional drama. Bailee Madison could eat up those Emmy moments if she's released. The first half is a missed opportunity.
This is Camp Rock for the church crowd with a dash of High School Musical sprinkled in (the two leads will remind you of Troy and Gabriella). You'll especially love the movie if you were into Christian music in the late 80's and 90's (there are even a couple of artist cameos for you).
I am a Christian, but my eyes get sore watching Christian movies because I'm rolling them so hard. They're very typically over-earnest, heavy-handed, and usually far-right in sentiment. One Week Away is none of these things, and if you like Camp Rock you'll enjoy this movie too, whether you appreciate the churchy message or not. The themes are universal: love, redemption, belonging, and the characters play through the themes without being schlocky - or at least more schlocky than any teen musical. I like that Will asks the hard questions that Christians are often afraid to ask, and there's no ready answer for him.
There are many things to criticize - the acting is at times uneven and the music isn't for everyone (although the showstopper is the Awesome God/God Only Knows mashup - brilliant performance), but the movie was short and fun and a very pleasant trip down memory lane for me. Worth watching, and worth watching with the kids.
I am a Christian, but my eyes get sore watching Christian movies because I'm rolling them so hard. They're very typically over-earnest, heavy-handed, and usually far-right in sentiment. One Week Away is none of these things, and if you like Camp Rock you'll enjoy this movie too, whether you appreciate the churchy message or not. The themes are universal: love, redemption, belonging, and the characters play through the themes without being schlocky - or at least more schlocky than any teen musical. I like that Will asks the hard questions that Christians are often afraid to ask, and there's no ready answer for him.
There are many things to criticize - the acting is at times uneven and the music isn't for everyone (although the showstopper is the Awesome God/God Only Knows mashup - brilliant performance), but the movie was short and fun and a very pleasant trip down memory lane for me. Worth watching, and worth watching with the kids.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe lifeguard in the musical scene of "Dive" is Steven Curtis Chapman who originally wrote and sang the song.
- GoofsWhen Will and Avery are walking through the woods, Will is seen walking with his guitar on his back, but there are multiple cuts of him walking with no guitar. One cut he has his guitar, the next he doesn't.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Flix Forum: A Week Away (2025)
- SoundtracksLet's Go Make a Memory
Words and Music by Adam Watts, Alan Powell, and Cory Clark
Performed by Kevin Quinn, Bailee Madison, Jahbril Cook, Kat Conner Sterling and Iain Tucker
(c) 2020 Reservoir Media Music (ASCAP) obo itself and Dying Ego Music (ASCAP)/Motion Media Music (BMI)/Pillow Fight Music (ASCAP)
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Details
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- Also known as
- Một Tuần Nắng Hạ
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
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- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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