Baseball team (the Cleveland Indians) helps a troubled teenaged fan.Baseball team (the Cleveland Indians) helps a troubled teenaged fan.Baseball team (the Cleveland Indians) helps a troubled teenaged fan.
Russ Tamblyn
- Johnny Barrows
- (as Rusty Tamblyn)
Leroy 'Satchel' Paige
- 'Satchel' Paige - Cleveland Indians Player Pitcher
- (as Satchell Paige)
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This is not as terrible a movie as I had read. It's a typical "social problems" movie from the post-World War II era, of which more famous examples would be "The Asphalt Jungle," "The Snake Pit," etc. As such, it's about delinquent children, why they become delinquent, and what might be done to solve that issue. It's not very convincing, frankly, but it's not terrible, either. It's just that the script is bad, the acting second-rate, and the direction no better. Not terrible, but not in any way impressive.
And then there are the baseball players whom the one child delinquent admires, all real members of the 1949 Cleveland Indians. They don't talk much about baseball, we don't really see what their lives are like (with the exception of Larry Doby's at the end), etc. As such, the movie really isn't about baseball.
Early in the movie, the players muff some of their lines, though they do better later. They aren't movie stars, and they don't pretend to be.
I doubt anyone is going to want to watch this movie to see how to deal with child delinquency. Those interested in the history of baseball may well want to see some of these legendary Indians just stand around and talk. (They don't really try to do any acting, nor are they called on to do so.) There is some newsreel footage from the Indians' World Series 1948 season, though not a lot of it.
In short, this movie is a mixed bag. The social problems segments are like a run of the mill 1950s TV drama. The scenes with the legendary Indians are not great movie-making, but it's fun to see those guys when they were active players.
And then there are the baseball players whom the one child delinquent admires, all real members of the 1949 Cleveland Indians. They don't talk much about baseball, we don't really see what their lives are like (with the exception of Larry Doby's at the end), etc. As such, the movie really isn't about baseball.
Early in the movie, the players muff some of their lines, though they do better later. They aren't movie stars, and they don't pretend to be.
I doubt anyone is going to want to watch this movie to see how to deal with child delinquency. Those interested in the history of baseball may well want to see some of these legendary Indians just stand around and talk. (They don't really try to do any acting, nor are they called on to do so.) There is some newsreel footage from the Indians' World Series 1948 season, though not a lot of it.
In short, this movie is a mixed bag. The social problems segments are like a run of the mill 1950s TV drama. The scenes with the legendary Indians are not great movie-making, but it's fun to see those guys when they were active players.
Little Johnny Barrows Jr is a kid from Cleveland, who lives with his loving Mom and Stepfather, but who is heading down the wrong path in life.
He doesn't get along with his Stepdad too well, so he's fallen in with a young hoodlum named Daniel, who idealizes a gang leader named Mac...who runs a crime syndicate of child thieves.
One day, Johnny runs away from home and uses his abilities as a con man to sneak in to the Cleveland Indians stadium, where he convinces the brass that he's an orphan.
They take pity on him and give him an oppourtunity to meet the players and take in a World Series game against the Boston Braves.
The team loses the game, but goes on to win the World Series. And this encourages Johnny to keep visiting the man who helped him that day...Mike Jackson, the teams radio announcer.
Despite conning Mike and even stealing from him, he never gives up on the boy...and goes on to become Johnny's mentor.
Johhny's real father died in World War II, and this new relationship with all his childhood heroes only makes him more antagonistic towards his stepfather, who is just a baker, and can't offer him that same sort of lifestyle.
So, when Johnny runs away for a second time to visit Mike, earning himself a job as a junior sportswriter and batboy for the Indians during spring training in Arizona...he feels that all his dreams are destroyed when his stepfather shows up to bring him back to Cleveland.
This leads Johnny to fall back in with Daniel, and a life of crime...landing him in detention at the Juvenile Court.
That is, until one day the Indians come to visit, reuniting him with all his old friends from the team...including Mike.
Mike is driven to help the boy- never having had a son of his own- and tries to help get him out of this seemingly hopeless situation...even going as far as offering to adopt him.
Johnny wants to be adopted by the well-to-do family...but his Mother and Stepfather are not willing to just give him out without a fight.
So the matter goes to court, where the Truth about the whole situation really comes out.
The court rules in his Mother's favour, but this does not mean that Mike, his wife, and his "30 Godfathers" from the team are just going to throw him away...so they promise to retain their friendship and relationship with him as the team's batsboy.
So Johnny ends up with 2 families, one that keeps him in touch with his heroes, and the other who help him work toward achieving his goal of becoming an architect.
Now, a boy who might have ended up in San Quentin, like his friend, has been directed down a more positive path in life.
This is a great story, that offers hope to kids who dream, but may not have been given all the prospects that life has to offer.
The acting and direction is solid, and the film features a whole load of real ball players from the Indians...including the now infamous Satchel Page.
It is certainly one of the best- and most inspiring- baseball films to have ever been made in the history of American Cinema.
All around, it's an entertaining and enjoyable film with a positive message, that will have you clapping at the end.
7.5 out of 10.
He doesn't get along with his Stepdad too well, so he's fallen in with a young hoodlum named Daniel, who idealizes a gang leader named Mac...who runs a crime syndicate of child thieves.
One day, Johnny runs away from home and uses his abilities as a con man to sneak in to the Cleveland Indians stadium, where he convinces the brass that he's an orphan.
They take pity on him and give him an oppourtunity to meet the players and take in a World Series game against the Boston Braves.
The team loses the game, but goes on to win the World Series. And this encourages Johnny to keep visiting the man who helped him that day...Mike Jackson, the teams radio announcer.
Despite conning Mike and even stealing from him, he never gives up on the boy...and goes on to become Johnny's mentor.
Johhny's real father died in World War II, and this new relationship with all his childhood heroes only makes him more antagonistic towards his stepfather, who is just a baker, and can't offer him that same sort of lifestyle.
So, when Johnny runs away for a second time to visit Mike, earning himself a job as a junior sportswriter and batboy for the Indians during spring training in Arizona...he feels that all his dreams are destroyed when his stepfather shows up to bring him back to Cleveland.
This leads Johnny to fall back in with Daniel, and a life of crime...landing him in detention at the Juvenile Court.
That is, until one day the Indians come to visit, reuniting him with all his old friends from the team...including Mike.
Mike is driven to help the boy- never having had a son of his own- and tries to help get him out of this seemingly hopeless situation...even going as far as offering to adopt him.
Johnny wants to be adopted by the well-to-do family...but his Mother and Stepfather are not willing to just give him out without a fight.
So the matter goes to court, where the Truth about the whole situation really comes out.
The court rules in his Mother's favour, but this does not mean that Mike, his wife, and his "30 Godfathers" from the team are just going to throw him away...so they promise to retain their friendship and relationship with him as the team's batsboy.
So Johnny ends up with 2 families, one that keeps him in touch with his heroes, and the other who help him work toward achieving his goal of becoming an architect.
Now, a boy who might have ended up in San Quentin, like his friend, has been directed down a more positive path in life.
This is a great story, that offers hope to kids who dream, but may not have been given all the prospects that life has to offer.
The acting and direction is solid, and the film features a whole load of real ball players from the Indians...including the now infamous Satchel Page.
It is certainly one of the best- and most inspiring- baseball films to have ever been made in the history of American Cinema.
All around, it's an entertaining and enjoyable film with a positive message, that will have you clapping at the end.
7.5 out of 10.
Cleveland Indians radio color commentator George Brent discovers Russ Tamblyn (in his first movie role) hiding out in the stadium. He says he's an orphan from Chicago who wants to see the game, so the team members agree he can come ack, and Brent takes him home to wife Lynn Bari and their two daughters. It comes out that Tamblyn isn't from Chicago, but Cleveland, and his mother Ann Doran and stepfather, Louis Jean Heydt.
Looking at the 1948 World Champion Indians is a bonus here, and enough to extend the movie into first-feature length. It's a story about a troubled boy, and well-meaning adults who are at the end of their tethers. For the era, it's quite frank, with Miss Bari mentioning casually that she cannot have any more children, and Heydt getting to show some range. Amidst this story, you get shots of the 1949 Indians on the field and off.
Looking at the 1948 World Champion Indians is a bonus here, and enough to extend the movie into first-feature length. It's a story about a troubled boy, and well-meaning adults who are at the end of their tethers. For the era, it's quite frank, with Miss Bari mentioning casually that she cannot have any more children, and Heydt getting to show some range. Amidst this story, you get shots of the 1949 Indians on the field and off.
... as a troubled teen baseball fan who hates his stepfather (Louis Jean Heydt), sneaks into the baseball stadium and claims he's an orphan, befriending the Cleveland Indians sportscaster (George Brent) and the whole team (playing themselves) but still getting in trouble with the law because of his home life and hanging around with a local hoodlum. The kindly sportscaster had been an orphan himself so he takes the boy under his wing and tries to find a way to reform him and keep him off the streets, and even convinces his wife (Lynn Bari) they should adopt him.
Of course, various complications intervene so we can have a wholesome portrait of the juvenile justice system bringing families together. The scenes using actual newsreel footage from the 1948 World Series are obviously grainier, but the newly shot 1949 baseball footage is all pristine in the copy I saw. The story is pretty much standard formula with little in the way of surprise twists, but it's all nicely done, beautifully shot (again with several noir-like sequences), and certainly a must for baseball fans and fans of delinquent-teen dramas.
Of course, various complications intervene so we can have a wholesome portrait of the juvenile justice system bringing families together. The scenes using actual newsreel footage from the 1948 World Series are obviously grainier, but the newly shot 1949 baseball footage is all pristine in the copy I saw. The story is pretty much standard formula with little in the way of surprise twists, but it's all nicely done, beautifully shot (again with several noir-like sequences), and certainly a must for baseball fans and fans of delinquent-teen dramas.
This is a great movie for old time baseball fans as we get to see a dozen or so famous baseball players from the 1920s, 30s and 40s. Nice to find out how successful the Cleveland Indians were in 1948 when they won the World Series and broke attendance records.
However the movie also tries to be a hard edge social drama dealing with juvenile criminality. Here the light-hearted baseball story breaks up and presents us with a seriously disturbed teenage criminal in Rusty Tamblyn ("Seven Brides for Seven Brothers," 1954, "West Side Story," 1961). He loves baseball, but he's attracted to the criminal life for the freedom and easy money. Unfortunately Tamblyn always looks like a sweet and innocent kid even when he's robbing people and threatening their lives.
He was 15 years old when he filmed the movie, but he looks younger, maybe 13 years old.
Again, I gave it 5 stars because the delightful baseball story and the serious juvenile delinquency story undercut each other. However baseball fans can add 2 stars and Russ Tamblyn fans can add 2 stars. Its a must see if you're a baseball and Russ Tamblyn fan.
However the movie also tries to be a hard edge social drama dealing with juvenile criminality. Here the light-hearted baseball story breaks up and presents us with a seriously disturbed teenage criminal in Rusty Tamblyn ("Seven Brides for Seven Brothers," 1954, "West Side Story," 1961). He loves baseball, but he's attracted to the criminal life for the freedom and easy money. Unfortunately Tamblyn always looks like a sweet and innocent kid even when he's robbing people and threatening their lives.
He was 15 years old when he filmed the movie, but he looks younger, maybe 13 years old.
Again, I gave it 5 stars because the delightful baseball story and the serious juvenile delinquency story undercut each other. However baseball fans can add 2 stars and Russ Tamblyn fans can add 2 stars. Its a must see if you're a baseball and Russ Tamblyn fan.
Did you know
- TriviaThe scenes depicting the main characters in Arizona at an outdoor barbecue were actually filmed at a mansion in Cleveland. The home was owned by the Erdman family and was located around the 1900 block of E. 87th St. Other scenes shot in Cleveland were at the following locations: Detention Home, Edgewater Park, The Flats, The Art Museum, The Cleveland Playhouse and of course, Cleveland Municipal Stadium.
- Crazy creditsIntroducing Rusty Tamblyn as Johnny Barrows and his 30 godfathers.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Kid from Cleveland (1949) officially released in India in English?
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