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Our Little Girl

  • 1935
  • PG
  • 1 Std. 5 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,3/10
573
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Shirley Temple in Our Little Girl (1935)
ComedyDramaFamilyMusicalRomance

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA troubled child tries to patch up her parents' broken marriage by running away.A troubled child tries to patch up her parents' broken marriage by running away.A troubled child tries to patch up her parents' broken marriage by running away.

  • Regie
    • John S. Robertson
  • Drehbuch
    • Stephen Morehouse Avery
    • Allen Rivkin
    • Florence Leighton Pflazgraf
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Shirley Temple
    • Rosemary Ames
    • Joel McCrea
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,3/10
    573
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John S. Robertson
    • Drehbuch
      • Stephen Morehouse Avery
      • Allen Rivkin
      • Florence Leighton Pflazgraf
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Shirley Temple
      • Rosemary Ames
      • Joel McCrea
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 1Kritische Rezension
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 wins total

    Fotos13

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    Topbesetzung14

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    Shirley Temple
    Shirley Temple
    • Molly Middleton
    Rosemary Ames
    Rosemary Ames
    • Elsa Middleton
    Joel McCrea
    Joel McCrea
    • Dr. Donald Middleton
    Lyle Talbot
    Lyle Talbot
    • Rolfe Brent
    Erin O'Brien-Moore
    Erin O'Brien-Moore
    • Sarah Boynton
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Mr. Tramp
    Poodles Hanneford
    Poodles Hanneford
    • Circus Performer
    Margaret Armstrong
    Margaret Armstrong
    • Amy
    Rita Owin
    Rita Owin
    • Alice
    Leonard Carey
    Leonard Carey
    • Jackson
    Jack Baxley
    • Leyton - Druggist
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Jack Donohue
    Jack Donohue
    • Actor
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Doris Nolan
    Doris Nolan
    • Undetermined Role
    • (Unbestätigt)
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Gus Van
    Gus Van
    • Magician
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • John S. Robertson
    • Drehbuch
      • Stephen Morehouse Avery
      • Allen Rivkin
      • Florence Leighton Pflazgraf
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen12

    6,3573
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    3ccthemovieman-1

    One Of The Few Unappealing Temple Movies

    Shirley Temple was in a few - not many - movies that just were not appealing. In most of her films, she overcomes a bad start in life (orphanages, etc.) or overcomes an evil, nasty person (usually Edna Mae Oliver or someone similar) but is seen happy most of the time and singing and dancing here and there. It's when the negative elements of the story are overemphasized (i.e. Blue Bird, Baby Take A Bow) that her films often lose appeal. That's the case in this movie.

    "Our Little Girl" is simply too depressing, a negative storyline in which Shirley's parents are ready for a divorce. Her mother has an affair with a friend and the father is away all the time on business, ignoring the family.

    When Temple ("Molly Middleton") is happy or cute, she's too cute in here, her sugary personality overdone. Meanhwhile, there is only one song and no dance numbers. People buy or rent Shirley Temple movies to feel good, not to get depressed or weighed down with broken-family soaps. There are plenty of other movies like that.
    8inkblot11

    Our little Shirley stars in a real tear jerker but the wee gal still brings a smile to anyone's face

    Dr. Donald Middleton (Joel McCrea) wanted to be a research physician, discovering important cures. However, when his wife, Elsa (Rosemary Ames) became pregnant, he settled for being a smalltown, New England family physician. Still, he is conducting his own experiments on the side but the result is that he works extremely long hours. Elsa has been patient, for she loves her husband and knows he cares for her and their daughter, Molly (Shirley Temple). Dr. Don still manages to take a break for Molly's "May and September Saturdays", that is, two picnics at a local park called Heaven's gate, where Don and Elsa met. One day, a handsome, rich male neighbor returns to his mansion next door. He invites Elsa and Don to ride with him on various mornings, but only Elsa has time for it. Trouble starts to brew when the neighbor makes a big play for the beautiful Elsa and Dr. Don continues to spend more time away from the house. Just what will be the result? This is a tearjerker of a film which, nevertheless, produces giggles, also, when Shirley is on the screen with her beloved doggie, Sniff. Just like any little girl, Shirley's Molly is pretty oblivious to problems at home so she continues to sing, dance, and crack jokes, even when her parents are having severe problems. McCrea is very good as the fine but workaholic father while Ames is pretty and touching as the neglected wife. All other lesser actors do a nice job, too. The picnic scenes are beautiful, the costumes quite acceptable, and the storyline is a true heartgrabber. Therefore, if you want to see Shirley in a smile-through-my-tears little flick, get this one soon. It might even bring estranged couples together again, for its support of marital reconciliation is very uplifting, even as the kiddies are entertained, too.
    6bkoganbing

    "Oh Mommy, Here's Daddy"

    Haul out the bathtowels on this one. No parents like Joel McCrea and Rosemary Ames are getting divorced as long as they have an offspring like Shirley Temple to keep them together.

    Our Little Girl finds America's favorite moppet the daughter of the aforementioned couple. Joel is a research doctor who takes a small country practice to both support his wife and his daughter. But he gets so involved in his experiments he's leaving his wife alone to the attention of his playboy neighbor Lyle Talbot. And he's looking like someone his nurse Erin O'Brien-Moore just might be able to catch on the rebound.

    The film had a great deal more potential than what we got. It could have been a serious look at divorce through a child's eyes. I think that's what they were trying for at Fox, but the problem was that Shirley's audiences expected things to go a certain way in her films. So Fox gave them the typical Shirley and then some. It was the 'and then some' that doomed this film to a weepy soggy mess.
    lugonian

    Molly in the Middle

    OUR LITTLE GIRL (Fox, 1935), directed by John Robertson, a domestic drama taken from a story "Heaven's Gate," stars Shirley Temple, Joel McCrea and someone by the name of Rosemary Ames (in her final screen appearance following a very brief movie career). Similar in theme to RKO Radio's WEDNESDAY'S CHILD (1934) that revolves around a boy (Frankie Thomas) whose happy home is disrupted by the separation of his parents (Edward Arnold and Karen Morley), OUR LITTLE GIRL centers around the moppet Temple facing the same situation of her own, but without any courtroom or child custody battles, which might have helped quicken the pace or added more interest to a somewhat slow scenario.

    Set in a small town, the plot introduces the Middletons as a happy family: Donald (Joel McCrea), a respectable doctor; Elsa (Rosemary Ames), his loving wife, and their little girl, Molly (Shirley Temple) who looks forward to their twice a year family picnic each May and September Saturday at a park called Heaven's Gate. Donald works long and hard on his experiments along with his assistant, Sarah Boiton (Erin O'Brien-Moore), a nurse who's secretly in love with him. Because he's away from home too often, Elsa spends much of her lonely hours with Rolfe Brent (Lyle Talbot), her former horse breading beau who recently has moved into town from Europe. Due to Donald's misunderstanding and jealously towards Elsa and Rolfe, the couple argue, leading little Molly to find herself caught in the middle of things, and unable to comprehend why her father will no longer be living with them anymore. After overhearing a conversation between her mother and Rolfe that has her believing that she's the cause for her parent's separation, Molly decides to take matters into her own hands by leaving home.

    A minor Temple drama with little of the Temple formula intact. Aside from singing a lullaby to her doll and later playing Stephen Foster's "Banjo on My Knee" on the piano, there are no songs nor dance numbers. Considering its theme, song interludes have no precedence in the story, though some slight doses of humor including Temple on the seesaw with her dog, Sniffy, as examples that keep the narrative from becoming strictly melodramatic. Unlike her more recent releases, OUR LITTLE GIRL, is the only one of Temple's leading roles that can be categorized as strictly "B" product, considering it being the shortest (63 minutes) of her starring film roles.

    Others in the supporting cast consist of Poodles Hannerton as the Circus Performer; Margaret Armstrong (Amy, the Middleton housekeeper); Ruth Owin (Alice) and Leonard Carey (Jackson), each as Brent's servants; and best of all, J. Farrell MacDonald billed as Mr. Tramp, playing a homeless man who comforts little Molly by listening to her story as to why she's leaving home. This little scene is well handled, with some humor in spoken dialog by Shirley thrown in for good measure. Watch for it.

    OUR LITTLE GIRL became one of many Temple movies to become available on video cassette during the late 1980s and then on DVD in both black and white and colorized formats. Formerly presented on The Disney Channel in the 1980s in colorized version, it then turned up on American Movie Classics as part of its Sunday morning "Kids Classics" (1996-2001), and finally on the Fox Movie Channel in its original black and white format. Bob Dorian, former host of AMC, once commented in his profile about OUR LITTLE GIRL in saying that its working title "Heaven's Gate" had been changed prior to release due to it the name suggesting a cemetery, leaving an indication as being a movie about death.

    Although OUR LITTLE GIRL didn't turn out as interesting as the rarely seen WEDNESDAY'S CHILD (1934), nor become the Academy Award winner as KRAMER Vs. KRAMER (1979), it's one of those little movies that might have been better had it not been hampered by a weak script. Had it not been for "Our Little Girl" Shirley Temple in the title role keeping the story alive with her know-how performance, then this minor effort of hers would certainly have ended up along with many old Fox Films to be either lost, forgotten or both. (**1/2)
    1brausahol

    Warning: Diabetes-inducing

    The issue of divorce and how it affects children is only marginally dealt with in this cloying story of a happy family torn apart by a rotten script. Too much time is spent on the cutesy antics of Shirley Temple, while too little time is devoted to the development of the plot and characters. In this 65-minute programmer, things happen at lightning speed, with little logic or motivation behind them. Thus, the marital split of the two leads comes too suddenly and seems unrealistic. The same can be said about the relationship between the soon-to-be-ex-wife and her wealthy suitor. The adult cast is passable, but Temple is unbearably sugary. Director John S. Robertson, used to handling costume pictures during the silent era, should have realized that less is more when it comes to baby grins and baby pouts. Make sure you check your blood-sugar level after watching this one.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The studio thought that this film's original title, "Heaven's Gate," sounded too much like a cemetery and changed it to "Our Little Girl."
    • Zitate

      Elsa Middleton: Mother's going away for a little while. And, when she comes back, she won't be married to Daddy anymore.

      Molly Middleton: Who will you be married to, Mommy?

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Biography: Shirley Temple: The Biggest Little Star (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Lullaby to a Doll
      (1935) (uncredited

      Music by Lew Pollack

      Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster

      Sung by Shirley Temple

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 17. Mai 1935 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Heaven's Gate
    • Drehorte
      • Lake Sherwood, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Fox Film Corporation
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 5 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Shirley Temple in Our Little Girl (1935)
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    By what name was Our Little Girl (1935) officially released in Canada in English?
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