A week later, Leo hosted a premiere in his garage. He’d strung up Christmas lights and set a box fan to “hurricane.” Finn and Marcus sat on overturned laundry baskets. Leo hit play on his dad’s old VCR.
The pallets split like toothpicks. The tarp tore. In a chaotic, slow-motion splash, all three kings were dumped into the canal. The Hi8 camera flew from Leo’s hand, performed a lazy spiral in the air, and plunged into the murky depths. The Kings of Summer Videos
The final shot, recorded just before the raft broke apart, was a close-up of Finn’s face. He wasn’t looking at the canal or the raft. He was looking at Leo, then at Marcus, and he smiled—the kind of unguarded, genuine smile that only exists when you’re thirteen and you know you’re exactly where you belong. A week later, Leo hosted a premiere in his garage
Then the raft hit a submerged branch.
The second summer, they got good. They learned to edit by taping over old home movies of Leo’s family vacations. They built a ramp out of plywood and cinderblocks and filmed Finn crashing his BMX bike into a hedge in slow motion. They documented the “Midnight Melon Massacre,” where they rolled watermelons down the steepest hill on Oak Street and watched them explode against the curb. The videos had no plot, no moral, no point—except to prove that summer was a kingdom they were actively conquering. The pallets split like toothpicks
They spent a week stealing pallets from behind the grocery store and lashing them together with extension cords. Marcus, whose dad was a roofer, supplied a tarp and a single, ancient oar. The finished vessel was a monstrosity: crooked, splintered, and gloriously unseaworthy.