Ein kleines Mädchen namens Star lebt bei einem Leuchtturmwärter, der sie rettete, als ihre Eltern ertranken. Ein Schulschwänzer beschließt, dass sie in ein Internat gehen soll, aber sie wird... Alles lesenEin kleines Mädchen namens Star lebt bei einem Leuchtturmwärter, der sie rettete, als ihre Eltern ertranken. Ein Schulschwänzer beschließt, dass sie in ein Internat gehen soll, aber sie wird von Verwandten gerettet.Ein kleines Mädchen namens Star lebt bei einem Leuchtturmwärter, der sie rettete, als ihre Eltern ertranken. Ein Schulschwänzer beschließt, dass sie in ein Internat gehen soll, aber sie wird von Verwandten gerettet.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 wins total
- Deputy Sheriff
- (as James Farley)
- Bud - Telegram Delivery Boy
- (Nicht genannt)
- Ira J. Slocum - Storekeeper
- (Nicht genannt)
- Second Engineer
- (Nicht genannt)
- First Engineer
- (Nicht genannt)
- Foreman
- (Nicht genannt)
- Governess
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Here, the "villain" is truant officer (Sara Haden) who wants to take Shirley away from good guy "Captain January" (Guy Kibbe). Kibbe and Slim Summerville are fun to watch as peers and friends who squabble all the time. Haden is effective in her role because you just want to slap that woman!
Shirley and Buddy Ebsen team up for a very entertaining song-and-dance routine to "The Codfish Ball," the best song in the movie.
The film gets a bit uncomfortable when Shirley gets taken away but ends in the normal tearfully-happy Shirley, as always, back with her loved ones and the people who really care about her. Those include the "widow" played by Jane Darwell and the school teacher, acted by June Lang.
All in all, it's the normal Temple movie that provides good feelings, something we viewers always need.
The story is not exactly the same as the original. The biggest difference is WHO Captain January is. In the 1924 film, it was the child's nickname but in this film, it's the name given to the child's adoptive father. Either way, the child was found along the shore following a shipwreck where the child's parents were killed. She was raised by a nice old lighthouse keeper (Guy Kibbee) and years later, a nasty old biddy wants to take the child away and put it in an orphanage because she feels the man is a bad influence on the kid. In the original, it was the child's aunt and uncle who threaten to take the kid and the old biddy was only a minor character. Either way, it all ends well--and everyone, naturally, is very happy.
This is a good family film....but not a great one. Shirley was fine and the film enjoyable but it just didn't seem like an improvement on an already lovely film. Worth seeing, but I recommend you see both.
Shirley not only sings a couple of bright tunes, but has a big dance scene on the wharf with Buddy Ebsen--complete with intricate taps and all kinds of whirls as they dance to "At the Codfish Ball". This and her opening number "Early Bird" are among the film's most charming routines.
Shirley gets emotional during the final tug of war where she is being torn away from the Cap, a crying scene that reveals just how deeply felt some of her performances were.
Highly recommended.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe earliest script of the movie called for Captain January to die at the end, just before Star is taken away from him by her relatives: "On their final evening together, he allows her to light the lamp in the lighthouse [something she has always wanted to do]. She is unaware that the Captain has suffered a massive heart attack and is unable to carry out his duties. January sees the lamp lit and dies." Shirley Temple's producer, Darryl F. Zanuck, made extensive changes to this script.
- Zitate
Helen: My mother was very beautiful, wasn't she, Cap?
Capt. January: Mighty pretty, Star, according to her pictures.
Helen: We're awfully lucky, aren't we?
Capt. January: Lucky?
Helen: I'd never have known what my mother looked like if it wasn't for that trunk. Did you swim out to get it, too?
Capt. January: No, it just washed ashore.
- Alternative VersionenJohn Carradine's scenes were deleted and uncredited.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Gotta Dance, Gotta Sing (1982)
- SoundtracksAt the Codfish Ball
(1936)
Music by Lew Pollack
Lyrics by Sidney D. Mitchell
Sung and danced by Shirley Temple (uncredited) and Buddy Ebsen (uncredited)
Also sung by Shirley Temple (uncredited), Guy Kibbee (uncredited), Slim Summerville (uncredited) and an offscreen Chorus
Played also during the end credits
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Captain January
- Drehorte
- Monterey, Kalifornien, USA(fisherman's wharf)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 17 Min.(77 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1