I'm not a Python expert (I know the name, that's about it) so my solution may not be correct. But I do think I know what the problem is and that should help you find the solution you're looking for.
When you open your file with a binary editor (or a good text editor showing invisible characters) you'll see that each line ending consists of three line-ending characters:
x0D x0D x0A
Or otherwise said
Carriage Return, Carriage Return, Line feed
This is wrong. From the PDF specification:
"As a matter of convention, the tokens in a PDF file are arranged into
lines; see 7.2, "Lexical Conventions."Each line shall be terminated by
an end-of-line (EOL) marker, which may be a CARRIAGE RETURN (0Dh), a
LINE FEED (0Ah), or both. PDF files with binary data may have
arbitrarily long lines."
I think this is what breaks Adobe Reader. It's strange that Adobe Reader and Acrobat throw a fit on this file, while many other (worse) PDF readers (such as Mac OS X Preview) seem to show it without any problem.
All of this said, you seem to have a problem with line endings. Given my limited knowledge of Python all I might point you to is the line:
file(filename, "w")
I read in Python documentation that on some platforms this can treat files as ASCII files and ruin binary files. As a PDF is definitely a binary file, I would change that to:
file(filename, "wb")
and see what happens.
I can tell you that for a far as I could see the rest of the file structure seems correct. So I think you have all necessary objects etc to show the file correct (as proven by Chrome and Mac Preview), so I really think the line ending problem is the one you need to solve.