This Movie Can Only Be Described With One Word.
It is not deep, but it is fun to watch. It does have a bit more of an edge to it than other similar films.
View MoreUnshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.
View MoreAmazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
View MoreThe Dink Stover stories like the Frank Merriwell ones were most popular back at the turn of the last century. This particular one concerns the young man even before he's at Yale as a rebellious youth going to Lawrenceville Prep back in 1896.Dean Stockwell who was at the height of his juvenile popularity in 1950 plays young Stover and in the fashion of those days was given the nickname 'Dink' as it was thought his full moniker was a bit high falutin'. He's a rebellious one and makes an enemy in upper classman Darryl Hickman who he fights once and swears to fight and win. As they said back in those days, the kid has Moxie.I'm surprised that these stories and the Dink Stover character was never given to Mickey Rooney a decade earlier when he was at MGM. It seemed a natural for the Mick in his salad days. Stockwell good actor that he was and the rest of the cast were not box office. The film lost money for MGM.Leo G. Carroll was the Latin teacher and head of Stockwell's house at the prep school recognizes leadership potential. But it takes a lot to get it out of him, especially with his feud with Hickman dominating all his thoughts.Sad this film didn't do better for MGM. It's a nice nostalgia filled film of those halcyon days before World War I.
View MoreDirected by William A. Wellman, and based on Owen Johnson's "Lawrenceville School" stories, this "coming of age" comedy drama stars 14 year old Dean Stockwell as an incorrigible young lad who eventually learns to fit in at a prep school, after having been thrown out of at least two others. A rivalry with a "tough" older boy, a friendship with a nerdy underage one, and gentle guidance provided by an Instructor who becomes his dormitory "house master" all lead to his maturation. Though not exceptional, this pre-"turn of the century" period piece does provide adequate entertainment and positive messages, after its slow start.Set in 1896 somewhere near New Jersey, unkempt John Humperdink Stover (Stockwell) was thrown out of his older brother's prep school for blowing up the chemistry lab, he wanted to prove that one could make dynamite without using gunpowder. While home, he paints the neighbor's horse green to help it hide from mosquitoes. His father Samuel Stover Sr. (Leon Ames) & mother Maude (Margalo Gillmore) are at their wits end, wishing their youngest was more like his model older brother Samuel Jr. (Peter M. Thompson) or proper sister 'Tootsie' (Jeralyn Alton, uncredited). They decide to give him one more chance, before reform school, by sending him to the Lawrenceville School, where 'Sambo' (what John calls his older brother), now at Yale, spent some time.On the horse & buggy ride from the train station to the school, Stover takes the reigns from the driver that wasn't going fast enough to suit him, upsetting an older passenger (Leo G. Carroll) also along for the ride. Upon arrival at the school, he is dropped off in front of the Green house, the off-campus dormitory for what looks like the roughest of the students. After introducing himself to the head boy, 'Tough' McCarty (Darryl Hickman), Stover is made to bow & introduce himself to the other boys seated on the front steps. Each has a unique nickname: 'Cheyenne' Baxter (Jerry Mickelsen), Coffee Colored Angel (Alan Dinehart III), White Mountain Canary (Dave Bair), and so forth. Stover is given the nickname 'Dink'.Venturing into town, while skipping classes his first day (a right of passage), Dink meets Tennessee Shad (Scotty Beckett), who fills him in on some of the folklore before scamming the greenhorn into purchasing a decorative toiletry set. Back at Green house, Dink's roommate Butsey White (Danny Mummert) mocks him for being taken. Later, as the ninth member of the house, Dink is made to play baseball, a sport he clearly doesn't play. Robert Wagner is uncredited as the opposing catcher, but is unrecognizable through the face mask. After helping his team lose the game, Dink is chased over a period of days by White Mountain Canary, until he's finally caught and must defend himself. When Dink comes out on top, he figures he can take on Tough for the head boy. He learns otherwise, though he vows revenge. He also learns that the older passenger from that first buggy ride is Mr. Hopkins (Carroll), the school's Latin teacher.The next thing you know the semester is over and Dink returns home having failed to make any friends. His family, which summers at the beach, seems to have heard about his rough time, and treats him with kid gloves throughout the season. During his vacation break, Dink teaches the local gang of ruffians some new tricks he'd learned while at school. While spoiling all the little girls' enjoyment during the summer with one particular ruse, Dink finally meets his match in Dolly Travers (Claudia Barrett), who also happens to be enamored with Tough McCarty.When Dink returns to school, he finds himself reassigned to Kennedy house, whose house master is Mr. Hopkins, dubbed 'The Old Roman'. He also meets the 'Great Big Man' (Donn Gift), who's anything but, in fact he's technically underage but smart enough to be one of the school's best students. He's staying at Kennedy house because his father is friends with 'The Old Roman', who's also the football coach. Because of his tenacity, and despite his size, the coach allows Dink to play on the scrubs (second, practice team), which gives him an opportunity to regularly tangle with the team's captain, Tough. Struggling with his Latin, Dink makes a deal with the 'Great Big Man' - he'll help the little guy live up to his name if the little genius will help Dink pass an oral Latin test to keep from flunking out of playing on the football team. The 'Great Big Man' uses two different unique physical talents to do both - an ability to wiggle his ears to help Dink answer some binary questions accurately, and his enormous appetite to earn a replacement nickname 'Hungry Smeed', and free pancakes for everyone on campus. Irving Bacon appears, uncredited, as the pancake establishment's owner, who'd "bet" that no one could eat more than twenty-six.Eventually, of course, even Tough and Dink become friends, when an injured player during a football game enables Dink to play side-by- side his rival. Additionally, Dink learns that 'The Old Roman' is not the ogre he thinks he is. There's also a cute little wrap up when the school year ends and Stover returns "home" to the beach.
View MoreWhat a wonderful thing for this movie finally to be released on DVD! I haven't seen it in over 30 years, but I treasured my memories of it. It was a real treat to see it again. I got to relive adventures with Tough McCarty, Tennessee Shad, Hungry Smead and the White Mountain Canary.This is an excellent family movie, and a great view of Americana at the turn of the century. The cast was very good, and while this will never be a mega-classic like Gone with the Wind, it's worth watching and re-watching.As others have said, the linchpin of the movie is Dink's final conversation with the Old Roman, and it's a great scene.Leo G. Carroll as the crusty Old Roman (aka Latin teacher, also football coach) and a young Dean Stockwell deliver solid performances that make this as lovable classic.***** a funny minor spoiler ****** When I was watching this with my wife, she couldn't figure out why Dink and Tough were going over game plays on the football field at night with nobody else around. I told her, male bonding, it's a guy thing. True in 1896, and true today. ***** end of spoiler *****
View MoreJust in case anyone has seen the movie "Enders Game" without reading the book, and/or feels rushed or confused by the psychology and fast growth of young "Ender" as characterized in the movie...Well, this old film from 1950 is excellent.It tells a very similar story about a young man's experiences as a youth in a prep school, in fighting and sports and knowledge.I wonder if Orson Scott Card ever saw this movie.The minimum length for my review is 10 lines of text... working on that. Do I have 10 lines yet? I do believe that brevity is the soul ofwit.
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