Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Young Donovans Kid

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
5.4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
5.4
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
60
51
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Fred Niblo

Story by
  
Rex Beach

Duration
  

Language
  
English

5.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Production
  
RKO Pictures

Country
  
United States

Young Donovans Kid Wikipedia


Release date
  
May 21, 1931 (1931-05-21) ( Premiere-New York City) June 6, 1931 (1931-06-06) (U.S.)

Based on
  
the novel, Big Brother  by Rex Beach

Writer
  
Rex Beach (story), J. Walter Ruben

Cast
  
Jackie Cooper
,
Richard Dix
,
Marion Shilling

Similar movies
  
My Man and I (1952)

Young Donovan's Kid is a 1931 American Pre-Code melodrama film directed by Fred Niblo, from a screenplay by J. Walter Ruben, based upon the short story, Big Brother, by Rex Beach. It was a remake of a 1923 silent film of the same, produced by Famous Players-Lasky, and directed by Allan Dwan. This version starred Richard Dix, Jackie Cooper (who was on loan to RKO from Hal Roach Studios), and Marion Shilling. The film also featured Boris Karloff in a supporting role.

Contents

Plot

Jim Donovan (Richard Dix) is a two-bit mob leader in New York during the 1920s. When another mobster, Ben Murray (Richard Alexander) is killed in a gunfight between rival gangs, Donovan takes it upon himself to raise his son, Midge Murray (Jackie Cooper). When Donovan seeks the advice of the parish priest on how to raise an adolescent boy, the priest, Father Dan (Frank Sheridan), enlists the services of his niece, Kitty Costello (Marion Shilling). When she directs Donovan to get honest work, he agrees, and she gets him a job at the ironworks where she is also employed. He is slowly transformed by the effect that both Midge and Kitty have on him. He also falls in love with Kitty.

Things are going well until the government gets involved, and Midge is taken away from Donovan and sent to a house of correction. Donovan is devastated and loses his mind, declaring war on the authorities. However, Kitty has not given up on him, and gets him to calm down, by working out a deal with the authorities (due to her own personal standing in the community) where Midge will be returned to him if he keeps his nose clean for several months.

The romance between Kitty and Donovan further blossoms over the course of the next couple of months, as Donovan looks forward to the return of Midge. However, one day as he is visiting Midge, Kitty is robbed of $5,000 which she was transporting from the ironworks to the bank. The police, suspecting the worst, arrest Donovan. He escapes from police custody and tracks down the actual culprits who perpetrated the robbery, who happen to be his old gang. He recovers the money, but in the process is seriously wounded in a gunfight.

Donovan manages to return the stolen funds to the police before collapsing. While in the hospital, he and Kitty declare their love for one another, and he is promised that Midge will join them shortly.

Cast

  • Richard Dix as Jim Donovan
  • Marion Shilling as Kitty Costello
  • Jackie Cooper as Midge Murray
  • Frank Sheridan as Father Dan
  • Boris Karloff as Cokey Joe
  • Dick Rush as Burke
  • Fred Kelsey as Collins
  • Richard Alexander as Ben Murray
  • Harry Tenbrook as Spike Doyle
  • Wilfred Lucas as Duryea
  • Philip Sleeman as Mike Novarro (as Phil Sleeman)
  • Robert Wilber as Monk Manilla
  • Charles Sullivan as Gyp
  • Jack Perry as Lefty
  • Frank Beal as McConnell
  • (Cast list as per AFI database)

    Reception

    The film recorded a loss of $100,000.

    Mordaunt Hall, of The New York Times, did not enjoy the film, stating the film was "a trifle too wearying for anybody more than sixteen. Other reviews of the time were a bit more generous. Screenland stated it was "A potent underworld drama with Richard Dix and Jackie Cooper giving great performances. The National Board of Review Magazine said the film was "Not so well directed as the silent version made years ago under the title of Big Brother, but the extraordinary acting of Jackie Cooper as the boy makes it well worth seeing." The Motion Picture Herald also gave it a favorable review.

    The film also received good notices from the New York World-Telegram, the New York American, the Daily News, Film Daily, the Evening Graphic, the Motion Picture Daily, the Evening Journal, and the New York Herald Tribune.

    International Photographer also had praise for the film especially for Dix and Cooper, of the latter saying, "... in his first screen appearance following Skippy. In the present instance the youngster's opportunities if anything are greater than in the former."

    References

    Young Donovan's Kid Wikipedia
    Young Donovans Kid IMDb