A salesman convinces Blondie that Baby Dumpling is a budding genius, so the Bumsteads enroll him in a special school from which he disappears.A salesman convinces Blondie that Baby Dumpling is a budding genius, so the Bumsteads enroll him in a special school from which he disappears.A salesman convinces Blondie that Baby Dumpling is a budding genius, so the Bumsteads enroll him in a special school from which he disappears.
Harry Hayden
- Elderly Man
- (scenes deleted)
Arthur Housman
- Drunk
- (scenes deleted)
Eugene Anderson Jr.
- Paperboy
- (uncredited)
Featured review
Goofy adventure with the Bumsteads, this episode featuring some poignant moments coupled with a Three Stooges-like plot, all worked around Dagwood.
Baby Dumpling is the center of attention, first being hailed as a child genius by a door to door salesman? Everything changes when Daisy wanders off, Baby goes looking for her and disappears. Is there a kidnapper on the loose?
Murphy's Law where everything goes haywire, and really fast. In a sentimental twist, it turns out Baby finds Daisy at the home of a girl confined to a wheelchair (played by Peggy Ann Garner). The two become friends, Dagwood meanwhile is searching for him and gets mistaken (very easily) for the kidnapper? The insane question; how could he look suspicious and goofy at the same time? A recurring theme in many more episodes to come.
Arthur Lake steals lots of scenes here. Even though the story is centered around Baby and Melinda, Dagwood gets himself into some bizarro complications that could lead to him going to prison for life!
Written by Gladys Lehman, one of the founders of the Screen Writers Guild, associated with many classics, later writing MEET JOE BLACK for Brad Pitt. Peggy Ann Garner does a wonderful job here, who would go on to win a special Oscar. She appeared in scores of top films; JANE EYRE, A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN and DAISY KENYON.
Check out the early film posters for these episodes, beautifully designed with a cartoon slant, saluting the comic strip series.
10 Stars. EPISODE 4 remastered. The BLONDIE films are packaged in dvd box sets, either separate episodes or the full series. Thanks again to MOVIES Net for running these classic episodes Saturday mornings.
Baby Dumpling is the center of attention, first being hailed as a child genius by a door to door salesman? Everything changes when Daisy wanders off, Baby goes looking for her and disappears. Is there a kidnapper on the loose?
Murphy's Law where everything goes haywire, and really fast. In a sentimental twist, it turns out Baby finds Daisy at the home of a girl confined to a wheelchair (played by Peggy Ann Garner). The two become friends, Dagwood meanwhile is searching for him and gets mistaken (very easily) for the kidnapper? The insane question; how could he look suspicious and goofy at the same time? A recurring theme in many more episodes to come.
Arthur Lake steals lots of scenes here. Even though the story is centered around Baby and Melinda, Dagwood gets himself into some bizarro complications that could lead to him going to prison for life!
Written by Gladys Lehman, one of the founders of the Screen Writers Guild, associated with many classics, later writing MEET JOE BLACK for Brad Pitt. Peggy Ann Garner does a wonderful job here, who would go on to win a special Oscar. She appeared in scores of top films; JANE EYRE, A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN and DAISY KENYON.
Check out the early film posters for these episodes, beautifully designed with a cartoon slant, saluting the comic strip series.
10 Stars. EPISODE 4 remastered. The BLONDIE films are packaged in dvd box sets, either separate episodes or the full series. Thanks again to MOVIES Net for running these classic episodes Saturday mornings.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIt's been noted that Baby Dumpling was beat up at school for TWO reasons. Number one was for his mother walking him to school. Number two was his name was Baby Dumpling. Well, it was a nickname. Anyway, Dagwood got Baby Dumpling to tell him why he got the black-eye so Dagwood suggested he use his real name.......Dagwood. Later, it was revealed during 'Blondie's Blessed Event' that his real name was Alexander. The comic strip probably hadn't given the boy a name yet and when the artist did, the movie writers went along with his name choice.
- GoofsPeggy Ann Garner visibly mouths Larry Simms' lines when the two discuss his swing.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Blondie on a Budget (1940)
- How long is Blondie Brings Up Baby?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Blondie Educa o Filho
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Blondie Brings Up Baby (1939) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer