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The Little Kidnappers (1953 film)

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Director
  
Awards
  
Academy Juvenile Award

Language
  
English

7.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, Family, Romance

Duration
  

Country
  
United Kingdom

The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) movie poster
Writer
  
Neil Paterson (screenplay)

Release date
  
December 1953 (1953-12)

Genres
  
Drama, Family film, Crime Fiction, Black-and-white

Cast
  
(Grandma MacKenzie), (Kirsty), (Dr. Willem Bloem), (Jim MacKenzie)

Similar movies
  
Related Philip Leacock movies

After losing their father in the Boer War, orphaned brothers Harry (Jon Whiteley) and Davy (Vincent Winter) must leave their home in Scotland to live with their grandmother (Jean Anderson) and cantankerous grandfather (Duncan Macrae) in Nova Scotia. The boys want nothing more than a pet dog, but their grandfather refuses to get them one. Then, when the brothers find an abandoned baby, they decide to keep it but the foundling may not have been abandoned after all.

Contents

The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) movie scenes

The Little Kidnappers, billed as The Kidnappers in the UK, is a 1953 British film, directed by Philip Leacock and written by Neil Paterson. It was remade as a TV movie in 1990.

The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) movie scenes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: The Little Kidnappers, billed as The Kidnappers in the UK, is a 1953 British film, directed by Philip Leacock and written by Neil Paterson. It was remade as a TV movie in 1990.

Plot

The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) movie scenes

In the 1900s, two young orphaned brothers, eight years old Harry (Jon Whiteley) and five years old Davy Mackenzie (Vincent Winter) are sent to live in a Scottish settlement in Nova Scotia, Canada, with their stern Grandaddy (Macrae) and Grandma (Anderson) after their fathers death in the Boer War. The boys would love to have a dog but are not allowed, Grandaddy holding that "ye canna eat a dog". Then they find an abandoned baby. Living in fear of Grandaddy (he beats Harry, the older boy, for disobeying him), they conceal it from the adults. They see it as a kind of substitute for the dog they have been denied (Davy, the younger boy, asks his brother, "Shall we call the baby Rover, Harry?").

Grandaddy is having problems with the Dutch settlers who have arrived at the settlement in increasing numbers after leaving South Africa at the end of the Boer War. He has had a long-running dispute with Afrikaaner Jan Hooft over ownership of a hill and refuses to accept a legal ruling that the land, in fact, belongs to Hooft. He also keeps a close rein on his grown-up daughter Kirsty (Corri) and is reluctant for her to make a life for herself. She is in love with the local doctor Willem Bloem, who left Holland for Canada for reasons he will not disclose. He does not return her affections.

To make matters worse, it turns out that the "kidnapped" baby is Hoofts younger daughter. When found out, Harry is tried at a court set up in the local trading store. He is suspected of taking her as a result of the tensions between the two families but states that he did not know her identity Surprisingly, Hooft speaks up in his defense, stating that no harm had come to her and his older daughter should have been looking after her. The court official suggests that Harry be sent to a corrective school, and is immediately threatened with shooting by Grandaddy. The clerk climbs down, merely suggesting an investigation into the location of these schools in case a further kidnapping should occur. Afterwards, Grandaddy thanks Hooft for speaking up for Harry.

The film ends with Grandaddy (who had never learned to read or write) instructing Harry to write to a mail order company to order the red setter they had set their hearts on. He had found the flyer for the dog in one of his best boots, where the boys had hidden it. They had noticed that he sometimes walked without these boots, slinging them over his shoulder, to save wear and tear. To pay for the dog, Grandaddy had sold them – a prized item among his few possessions. Davy is now able to say, "I think well call him Rover, Harry."

One of the films most memorable moments comes with the horror on Duncan Macraes face at what his grandson must have thought of him when he implores "Dont eat the babbie, grandaddy!".

Cast

  • Duncan Macrae as Jim MacKenzie
  • Jean Anderson as Grandma MacKenzie
  • Adrienne Corri as Kirsty
  • Theodore Bikel as Dr. Willem Bloem
  • Jon Whiteley as Harry, Jims grandson
  • Vincent Winter as Davy, another grandson
  • Francis de Wolff as Jan Hooft Sr.
  • James Sutherland as Arron McNab
  • John Rae as Andrew McCleod
  • Jack Stewart as Dominie
  • Jameson Clark as Tom Cameron
  • Eric Woodburn as Sam Howie
  • Christopher Beeny as Jan Hooft Jr.
  • Reception

    The film was the eighth most popular movie at the British box office in 1954.

    Awards

    Both Whitely and Winter were presented with Honorary Juvenile Acting Oscars for their performances. In addition, the film was nominated for three BAFTA Film Awards and was entered into the 1954 Cannes Film Festival.

    References

    The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) Wikipedia
    The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) IMDb The Little Kidnappers (1953 film) themoviedb.org