The Beloved Brat
The Beloved Brat | |
---|---|
Directed by | Arthur Lubin |
Written by | Lawrence Kimble |
Based on | story by Jean Negulesco |
Starring | Bonita Granville Donald Crisp Dolores Costello |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date | 1938 |
Running time | 62 mins |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
Roberta Morgan has wealthy parents who give her plenty of material possessions but who basically ignore her. She acts out and torments the family butler Jenkins. The only person to take notice of her thirteenth birthday is her father's secretary, Williams.
She makes friends with a black boy, Pinkie White, and visits his home. She is impressed by the love Pinkie's mother, Mrs White, shows Pinkie and his sister Arabella. Roberta invites Pinkie to dinner to say thank you and Jenkins angrily throws out Pinkie.
Roberta's parents go away and Roberta starts behaving even more badly. Jenkins locks her in her room. She sets fire to it and escapes. Jenkins tracks her to Pinkie's house. On the way home in the car, they argue and Roberta grabs the steering wheel causing the car to swerve into an oncoming car and kill the driver.
Roberta tells the police that Jenkins was drinking and the butler is sentenced to prison for manslaughter. Guilt ridden she confesses that she made it up.
Roberta is sentenced to a special girls' school run by Helen Cosgrove. Helen manages to reform Roberta by getting her to help with younger students. When Roberta is allowed to return home, she refuses to leave. Her parents hear about this and change their ways.
Cast
- Bonita Granville as Roberta Morgan
- Dolores Costello as Helen Cosgrove
- Donald Crisp as John Morgan
- Natalie Moorhead as Evelyn Morgan
- Matthew "Stymie" Beard as Pinkie White
- Lucile Gleason as Miss Brewster
- Donald Briggs as Jerome Williams
- Leo Gorcey as Spike Matz
- Emmett Vogan as Jenkins
- Paul Everton as Judge Henry Harris
- Loia Cheaney as Mrs. Jenkins
Production
The film was titled Too Much of Everything.[3] Dolores Costello signed in September 1937. It was her comeback picture for Warners.[4] In November the title was changed to Girls on Probation. Arthur Lubin directed in November 1937.[5]
The title was changed to Beloved Brat in January 1938.[6]
Reception
Diabolique magazine called it "an entertaining star vehicle for Bonita Granville, playing a poor little rich girl who sets her room on fire, accidentally kills a motorist by grabbing the wheel of a speeding car, sends the racist family butler to prison for the crime by perjuring herself on the stand, is sent to reform school and… actually reforms... of cultural interest in that it shows a black mother character to be a far superior parent to Granville’s parents, and Granville’s best friend is a black boy." [7]
References
- The Beloved Brat at TCMDB
- "THE SCREEN: ' Beloved Brat,' a Problem-Child Film, Opens at the Strand". New York Times. 2 May 1938. p. 13.
- MERVYN LEROY, FAMED FOR 'ANTHONY ADVERSE,' BECOMES M.-G.-M. PRODUCER: Illness Hits "Merrily We Live" Feature Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times (1923-1995); Los Angeles, Calif. [Los Angeles, Calif]12 Nov 1937: A11.
- FLASHES ON THE SCREEN New York Times (1923-Current file); New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]19 Sep 1937: 178.
- DOLORES COSTELLO TO PURSUE REVIVED STAR CAREER AT WARNERS: Ex-Telephone Girl Makes Good at Paramount Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 20 Nov 1937: 6.
- "BATTLE OF BROADWAY" CHOSEN AS FEATURE FOR VICTOR McLAGLEN Los Angeles Times 25 Jan 1938: 10.
- Vagg, Stephen (14 September 2019). "The Cinema of Arthur Lubin". Diabolique Magazine.
External links
- The Beloved Brat at the American Film Institute Catalog
- The Beloved Brat at Letterbox DVD
- The Beloved Brat at IMDb
- Trailer at TCMDB
- The Beloved Brat at BFI