Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA little girl named Star lives with the lighthouse keeper who rescued her when her parents drowned. A truant officer decides she should go to boarding school, but she's rescued by relatives.A little girl named Star lives with the lighthouse keeper who rescued her when her parents drowned. A truant officer decides she should go to boarding school, but she's rescued by relatives.A little girl named Star lives with the lighthouse keeper who rescued her when her parents drowned. A truant officer decides she should go to boarding school, but she's rescued by relatives.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 3 premios en total
- Deputy Sheriff
- (as James Farley)
- Bud - Telegram Delivery Boy
- (sin acreditar)
- Ira J. Slocum - Storekeeper
- (sin acreditar)
- Second Engineer
- (sin acreditar)
- First Engineer
- (sin acreditar)
- Foreman
- (sin acreditar)
- Governess
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
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.
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.
Shirley Temple captivates her audience once again in this, one of her most popular films. Aided by fine production values courtesy of Fox, the Tiny Tyke does not disappoint. Singing & dancing, laughing or crying, she once again exhibits all the talents which for years made her top of the Hollywood box office heap.
It's difficult to imagine anyone other than cuddly Guy Kibbee in the title role. He's excellent, but he's also given firm support from old pros Slim Summerville & Jane Darwell. Sara Haden makes a nasty villainess, while OUR GANG bad boy Jerry Tucker is her obnoxious nephew. Pretty June Lang plays the sweet village schoolteacher.
Amiable hoofer Buddy Ebsen joins Shirley in a wonderful song & dance number, The Cod Fish Ball.' Tall & pliable, with plenty of goofy facial expressions, Buddy's performance gives a little idea as to how much he might have contributed to THE WIZARD OF OZ three years later over at Metro, had not health reasons forced him to withdrawal.
Shirley also sings Early Bird' and, in a delightful nursery fantasy, The Right Somebody To Love.'
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe 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.
- Citas
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.
- Versiones alternativasJohn Carradine's scenes were deleted and uncredited.
- ConexionesFeatured in Gotta Dance, Gotta Sing (1982)
- Banda sonoraAt 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
Selecciones populares
- How long is Captain January?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración
- 1h 17min(77 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1