Drama about a problem child and her problem parents.Drama about a problem child and her problem parents.Drama about a problem child and her problem parents.
Lucile Gleason
- Miss Brewster
- (as Lucille Gleason)
Matthew 'Stymie' Beard
- Pinkie White
- (as Stymie Beard)
Gloria Fisher
- Boots
- (as Gloria Fischer)
Jessie Arnold
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
Mary Avery
- Teacher
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe $50 Roberta receives from her father as a birthday present would equate to over $900 in 2019.
- GoofsIn two consecutive scenes between Donald Briggs and Dolores Costello, one interior and then exterior, first the shadow of the mike and then the mike and boom can be seen.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jack Wrather: A Legacy of Film and Friendship (2022)
Featured review
BONITA GRANVILLE specialized in playing brattish kid sister roles throughout most of the '30s (when she wasn't playing Nancy Drew), and this is one of her more insufferable roles as a rich brat given to tossing dinner trays out the window when in a huff.
She plays the neglected daughter of DONALD CRISP, only instead of pouting the way Shirley Temple would do under these "dire" circumstances, Bonita takes a feistier approach, talking back to the house servants and refusing to eat her spinach with much more vehemence than Shirley ever showed.
She befriends a black boy, only because he promises to teach her how to use his rifle. LEO GORCEY turns up as another unlikely companion for the poor little rich girl and from then on the film becomes pretty unwatchable as Bonita is taught a thing or two about changing her snobbish ways.
By the time the plot gets any thicker, Bonita has totally lost the patience of her parents as well as the viewer. Too bad Warner Bros. couldn't come up with better scripts for their child star instead of casting her in these insipid programmers that are enough to wear anyone's patience.
Any resemblance to the real world is purely coincidental.
Trivia note: The script was written by Jean Negulesco, who later made a much better director than screenwriter.
She plays the neglected daughter of DONALD CRISP, only instead of pouting the way Shirley Temple would do under these "dire" circumstances, Bonita takes a feistier approach, talking back to the house servants and refusing to eat her spinach with much more vehemence than Shirley ever showed.
She befriends a black boy, only because he promises to teach her how to use his rifle. LEO GORCEY turns up as another unlikely companion for the poor little rich girl and from then on the film becomes pretty unwatchable as Bonita is taught a thing or two about changing her snobbish ways.
By the time the plot gets any thicker, Bonita has totally lost the patience of her parents as well as the viewer. Too bad Warner Bros. couldn't come up with better scripts for their child star instead of casting her in these insipid programmers that are enough to wear anyone's patience.
Any resemblance to the real world is purely coincidental.
Trivia note: The script was written by Jean Negulesco, who later made a much better director than screenwriter.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Girls on Probation
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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