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Les enfants de la crise

Original title: Wild Boys of the Road
  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Les enfants de la crise (1933)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:16
1 Video
15 Photos
Coming-of-AgeRoad TripTeen AdventureTeen DramaTragedyAdventureDrama

In the depths of the Depression, two teenage boys strike out on their own in order to help their struggling parents and find life on the road tougher than expected.In the depths of the Depression, two teenage boys strike out on their own in order to help their struggling parents and find life on the road tougher than expected.In the depths of the Depression, two teenage boys strike out on their own in order to help their struggling parents and find life on the road tougher than expected.

  • Director
    • William A. Wellman
  • Writers
    • Earl Baldwin
    • Daniel Ahern
    • Robert Presnell Sr.
  • Stars
    • Frankie Darro
    • Rochelle Hudson
    • Edwin Phillips
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William A. Wellman
    • Writers
      • Earl Baldwin
      • Daniel Ahern
      • Robert Presnell Sr.
    • Stars
      • Frankie Darro
      • Rochelle Hudson
      • Edwin Phillips
    • 54User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Wild Boys of the Road
    Trailer 2:16
    Wild Boys of the Road

    Photos15

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Frankie Darro
    Frankie Darro
    • Eddie
    Rochelle Hudson
    Rochelle Hudson
    • Grace
    Edwin Phillips
    • Tommy
    Dorothy Coonan Wellman
    Dorothy Coonan Wellman
    • Sally
    • (as Dorothy Coonan)
    Sterling Holloway
    Sterling Holloway
    • Ollie
    Arthur Hohl
    Arthur Hohl
    • Dr. Heckel
    Ann Hovey
    Ann Hovey
    • Lola
    Minna Gombell
    Minna Gombell
    • Aunt Carrie
    Grant Mitchell
    Grant Mitchell
    • James Smith
    Claire McDowell
    Claire McDowell
    • Mrs. Smith
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Judge R.H. White
    Willard Robertson
    Willard Robertson
    • Captain of Detectives
    Beaudine Anderson
    • Boy
    • (uncredited)
    William Augustin
    William Augustin
    • Police Sergeant
    • (uncredited)
    Ward Bond
    Ward Bond
    • Red
    • (uncredited)
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • Policeman in Court
    • (uncredited)
    Eddy Chandler
    Eddy Chandler
    • Brakeman Throwing Stones
    • (uncredited)
    John R. Coonan
    • Youth in Line-up
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William A. Wellman
    • Writers
      • Earl Baldwin
      • Daniel Ahern
      • Robert Presnell Sr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    7.52.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Doylenf

    Vivid social drama from Warner Bros...fine performances...

    FRANKIE DARRO and EDWIN PHILLIPS play depression-era buddies with great chemistry and natural vigor and charm. They are the key ingredients in keeping the story firmly in the realm of believability throughout. An intriguing slice of life for depression weary audiences--one has to wonder what the initial effect was upon release in 1933.

    Whatever, it all plays out extremely well except for what appears to be a tacked on ending that gives a positive spin to the tale.

    Grant Mitchell does fine work as Darro's depressed out-of-work father who shows his love and respect for his son when Darro sells his jalopy (for a mere $22!!) to help out the family. Interesting to note Ward Bond in an unsavory role as a railroad official who is brutally punished after taking advantage of a stowaway girl.

    All of the vivid railroad scenes have been expertly photographed and the incident involving the unfortunate Phillips and his leg accident is powerfully depicted. William Wellman's direction keeps things moving swiftly and satisfactorily for a tense and gripping little social drama told in little more than an hour.

    Highly recommended, especially because it's a product of its time and reveals all of the societal ills rampant in the early '30s.
    wsureck

    Teenagers take on the Great Depression

    One of the surprisingly realistic dramas that Hollywood created in the early 1930's has teenagers hitting the road during the hard times of the Great Depression.

    With their east coast (New "Yawk?") accents, and rough around the edges "Bowery Boys"-style (harken, Leo Gorcey!), Frankie Darrow and a gang of displaced down-on-their-luck (formerly middle class?) teens band together and roam the countryside on foot or by rail, getting into hot water seemingly everywhere they go. Amazing graphic scenes for 1933 include a kid's leg being amputated by a train and an attempted rape scene.

    Miserable living conditions and hunger are also depicted with kids lying cheating and stealing to stay alive, but willing to straighten themselves out when given a chance.

    You'd think Warner Brothers was taking a risk financing a film that was so bleak and lacking in entertainment value for people that may have been LIVING the kinds of scenes shown, but the film also seems like a propaganda piece for Roosevelt's New Deal. There's a Roosevelt look-alike judge who places his hand, almost in a blessing, on poor Frankie's head and says "things are going to get better very soon".

    Overall, Wild Boys of the Road is an interesting social drama that deserves more exposure and recognition.
    dougdoepke

    Kids Also Suffer

    Mention the Great Depression and most folks draw a blank or nod off. After all, who wants to be reminded of soup kitchens, dour old men, and dust bowls. Seventy years later and it's a closed book, forgotten and unlamented. Now and again, however, that dusty book needs re-opening. Because, in spite of the best efforts of the best of us, the past is not alway past. This edgy little Warner Bros. production provides a brief picture of the youth of that day, a harrowing story of survival amidst economic collapse.

    The movie wouldn't work so well without the contrast the first half-hour provides. Darro and friends are typical middle-class teens, fun-loving and care-free. It's a world of proms, necking parties, and harmless pranks. Then without warning things change. Why they change is never really explained which is the way it should be. For most kids knew nothing of stock markets and dis-investment. They only knew that suddenly Dad doesn't go to work anymore and mom cries a lot, bills pile up, and no one gets a job, anywhere. Middle-class privilege plunges into no-income poverty, and Darro and his buddy do like millions of others. They hop a freight, hoping the next town, the next state, the next someplace, will give them a chance to make a living. What they get instead are private armies, battalions of cops, and a forest of billy clubs. They're driven on to the next jurisdiction and the next welcoming committee. Nobody wants the footloose unemployed adding to their own local problems. Maybe the attitude's not charitable, but it makes practical sense.

    The battles atop freight cars and in hobo jungles are expertly filmed and dynamically staged, a stark panorama of social desperation. These scenes make up the movie's centerpiece. If anything they're mildly presented compared to the actual blood-letting that surrounded the desperate and up-rooted. Union organizing was especially bloody and bitterly fought-- an explosive topic Hollywood has only timidly touched on over the years. Nonetheless, the nail-biting episode on the train track stands-in for at least some of the actual pain and suffering caused by those crisis years.

    Darro may be small, but he's energetic, something of a younger Cagney. His determined spirit to keep going no matter what is convincing, and helps drive the others on. I expect it also had that effect on audiences of the day. I like the way director Wellman suggests the kids can set up their own constructive community, if given half-a-chance. Some reviewers complain about the final scene with the understanding judge. Yes, it is pretty contrived, but it wasn't unrealistic given the package of New Deal reforms then in the works. If those measures didn't exactly solve the economic crisis (only WWII did that), they at least offered hope that the problems would no longer be kicked down the road to the next jurisdiction.

    Wild Boys may not be the most honest or best movie on those tumultuous years. Still, it does furnish a provocative and entertaining glimpse. In any event, some books should not remain closed. After all, who knows when the unfortunate history of that era may again repeat itself.
    Michael_Elliott

    Strong Stuff

    Wild Boys of the Road (1933)

    *** 1/2 (out of 4)

    William A. Wellman directs this Depression era drama about two boys (Frankie Darro, Edwin Phillips) who run away from home and jump on the railroad route in hopes of finding a job so that they can help their families back home. Once again there must have been something inside of Wellman because there's a lot of passion in this film aimed at the poor who must do what they can to try and survive. This is a very hard hitting film that looks at this kids in a very serious light and it makes for a terrific little gem that deserves more attention than it's gotten within film history. Both Darro and Phillips are terrific in their roles and the chemistry they offer is great. Wellman's future wife, Dorothy Coonan, is also very good in her role as the boys buddy. The first twenty-minutes of the film shows the boys as normal teenagers but then we see their parents lose their jobs and thus forcing them to hit the road. This set up really sells the rest of the film and it also helps us see the suffering they're going to go through for the rest of the film. Wellman does a great job with the tender side of the story as well as a couple great fight sequences where they boys attack some railroad police as well as a rapist. Darro has a bit of Cagney in him and his performance here seems to have had a major influence on what we'd eventually see from The Dead End Kids.
    rsyung

    Nice Spare Storytelling

    `Wild Boys of the Road' is another fine example of the spare storytelling prevalent in the 1930's-- before egos, the demise of double features and the birth of multiplexes conspired to inflate movie running times to over two hours. Wearing its heart on its sleeve at times, Wellman nevertheless creates a story in true Warner Bros fashion--grim reality washed down with a dose of social commentary. One wonders if the rosy ending was considered necessary because of the age of the protagonists involved. Downbeat endings were certainly in evidence during that time from Warners: as the denouement of `Public Enemy' will bear witness. As the young tramps ride the rails, Wellman infuses the scenes with such energy and dynamism as to render them almost euphoric, despite the somber subject matter. As a veteran flyer from World War I, he seemed especially adept at combining humans we care about with dangerous, hurtling machines. And pre-code shocks abound-in addition to the implied rape and dismemberment, it seems apparent that young Sally's aunt, in Chicago, has established a business of dubious respectability in her own home, just before the kids fly the coop to avoid a police raid. Striking location photography.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie shown in the movie theater scene (about an hour into the film) is another Warner Bros. release, Prologues (1933).
    • Goofs
      There are no mountains in Columbus, Ohio.
    • Quotes

      Eddie: [to the judge] I knew all that stuff about you helping us was baloney. I'll tell you why we can't go home: because our folks are poor. They can't get jobs and there isn't enough to eat. What good will it do you to send us home to starve? You say you've got to send us to jail to keep us off the streets. Well, that's a lie. You're sending us to jail because you don't want to see us. You want to forget us. But you can't do it because I'm not the only one. There's thousands just like me, and there's more hitting the road every day.

      Tommy: [also to the judge] You read in the papers about giving people help. The banks get it. The soldiers get it. The breweries get it. And they're always yelling about giving it to the farmers. What about us? We're kids!

    • Connections
      Featured in Alibi Mark (1937)
    • Soundtracks
      The Gold Diggers' Song (We're in the Money)
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      [Played after the kids leave the dance; also whistled by Eddie (Frankie Darro)]

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 7, 1933 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wild Boys of the Road
    • Filming locations
      • Southern Pacific Taylor Yard, Glendale, California, USA(train yard sequence)
    • Production company
      • First National Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 8m(68 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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