A Bible-guided Victorian orphan befriends a bootblack in a strange town.A Bible-guided Victorian orphan befriends a bootblack in a strange town.A Bible-guided Victorian orphan befriends a bootblack in a strange town.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 2 wins total
- John Little
- (uncredited)
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
- Lem Dodd
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Miss Brown
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Miller
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Brown
- (uncredited)
- New Sentinel Editor
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Simms
- (uncredited)
- Fireman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Wonderful supporting characters, (although more important), since she played an orphan, and was constantly looking for guidance and acceptance. The Father figure, the boyfriend, his alcoholic father, and the other character actors made this a balanced film. Christian overtones wouldn't get it through to the big screen these days, but this was 1939. Late in the Depression, Christian thinking was very strong. Worth watching!
I love this premise. It is a fun concept with plenty of morality and sweetness already built-in. Virginia Weidler is a good child star who retired in her teens. She may not be the biggest star but she has the natural innocence required for the role. I wonder if anyone is making a remake.
The unique theme of this movie? Believing in the Bible. Wow, what a novel concept!
The lead character in here, played wonderfully by Virginia Weidler, is an 11 or 12-year-old girl who starts off sentences with, "Well....the Bible says."....or "The Lord told me.." And she's proved right, time after time.
It's a short (72-minute) story about a girl who runs away from home, finds a family, and then helps her "adopted" father with a major problem. Along the way, she transforms a young ruffian and his drunken father, and a grumpy old man who owns the town. This girl - with Scripture in hand - does it all!
It isn't simply a corny, overly sentimental film, although those certainly are ingredients in this mix. There also is drama, action, romance and humor....a little bit of everything.
This is a wonderful, unique film. Sad to say it's never been available on tape or disc. Too bad, because there is a sizable Bible-believing audience out there hungry for something as refreshing as this.
Set in the early 1900s, Weidler undertakes the role as Patricia Victoria Sanderson, better known as "Patsy," an dark-haired orphan sporting pigtails and wearing a little Cross hanging from around her neck, living under the care Mrs. Perkins (Elizabeth Patterson), an elderly woman wheelchair bound. These two lonely souls love and help one another, with Mrs. Perkins teaching Patsy the importance of the Good Book: whenever she gets in trouble and nowhere to turn, she should say a little prayer, open up the Bible and point her finger on a verse on any given page, and accept it as a message from God. (Very interesting concept). Trouble starts knocking at their door when the head of the orphanage comes to take Patsy away, causing Mrs. Perkins to succumb to a heart attack. Back at the orphanage where Patsy originated, the supervisors (Arthur Aylesworth and Esther Dale), of the dreadful place bring her down in saying that she is a jinx to those who take her in. Wanting to escape her surroundings and with no idea where to go, Patsy opens up her Bible, points onto the page that writes about Egypt. Taking her dog with her, Patsy heads over to the nearest train station where she buys a ticket to Egypt, not the Egypt across the ocean, but to a small town in New Jersey. While there she encounters Tommy Wilks (Gene Reynolds), a teenage son of a habitual drunk (Henry Hull), who guides her to the right direction, especially after learning she's an escaped orphan eluding authorities who are after her. Tommy introduces her to Jim Creighton (Ian Hunter), editor of the town newspaper,The Sentinel. He finds himself taking this child home with him where she meets his wife (Lois Wilson) and three children (Ann Todd, Mickey Kuhn and Douglas Madore). All goes well until Creighton loses his job and becomes critically ill, causing Patsy to really believe she is a jinx, but in time, just as she is losing her faith and planning to leave, she opens the Bible once more and comes across a very important verse that really opens her eyes.
A "B" movie running at 73 minutes consists of familiar faces supporting the cast, including Guy Kibbee as the unlikable Luther Marvin; Reginald Owen (Scrooge in 1938s A Christmas CAROL) as Marvin's butler; with Milton Parsons, Mitchell Lewis, Byron Foulger and George Irving in smaller roles.
BAD LITTLE ANGEL might be a misnomer of a title, since the girl is far from bad. The story has warmth, amusement and inspiring message, a sort of movie best presented to children attending Sunday School class, particularly since it has a youngster as the central character, with Weidler being more like an ordinary child than a child performing like an actress. Direction, authentic period settings and acting all get "A" for effort.
BAD LITTLE ANGEL occasionally airs on Turner Classic Movies. To find out when it will be shown again, instead of the Bible, let the website or program listing be your guide. (**1/2)
Did you know
- Trivia"Rex", the dog in this movie, is the same dog (Terry) who played Toto in Le Magicien d'Oz (1939).
- Quotes
Patsy: Tommy, why do you have to always be so grumpy? Why can't we be friends?
Tommy Wilks: I don't want any friends
Patsy: Tommy Wilks, if the recording angel puts that lie in his book, you won't go to Heaven
Tommy Wilks: Yeah, well, if there is a Heaven, I'd probably get kicked out of there, too
Patsy: Why, you would not. Don't you know that Heaven is a place where you're wanted? Where you can stay forever?
Tommy Wilks: Who'd wanna stay there forever?
Patsy: I hope the Lord isn't listening to you because He'd probably be hopping mad. Only He knows people never say what they mean when they're in trouble. I'll bet even the Lord had said things He didn't mean when He was worried about something
Tommy Wilks: Yeah, well, nobody needs worry about me. I can take care of myself
Patsy: You'd better look out. The Bible says pride goes before a fall
Tommy Wilks: What do I care?
[trips and falls]
Patsy: [to God] Well, I'm glad he wasn't hurt, but did you have to trip him?
- ConnectionsReferenced in Princesse Sofia: Bad Little Dragon (2016)
- SoundtracksLong, Long Ago
(uncredited)
Music by Thomas Haynes Bayley
Lyrics by Thomas Haynes Bayley
[Played as background music over the opening credits; reprised often as background music]
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 12m(72 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1