Shirley Temple Storybook Collection: The Early Years, Shirley's First Films [DVD]
B**N
early Temple a real treat
No collection of Shirley Temple films is complete without her enjoyable shorts from the "Baby Burlesks", produced by Educational Films/Comedy House in 1932. These little films provided Temple with the springboard needed to become a bankable child star, and the success of the films paved the way for Temple's later films with Universal and Twentieth Century-Fox. In the films, four-year-old Temple and a cast of talented tots (including Danny Boone Jr., Georgie Smith and Sidney Kilbrick) play adults in parodies of grownup movies and musicals. The "Burlesks" were produced quite economically by Jack Hays, but were quickly overshadowed by the "Our Gang" comedies, and the company folded in 1934.All seven films featured on this disc have been newly-colourised and restored, quite simply these films have never looked better. Legend Films has released this disc as a supplement to their series of "Shirley Temple's Storybook" DVDs. Includes:"Kid 'in Hollywood" - In the heydey of Hollywood talkies, exhausted leading lady 'The Great Snobbo' walks off her latest picture, so the director hires a young unknown called Morelegs Sweetrick... A great sendup of Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich films."Glad Rags to Riches" - Temple plays a glamorous nightclub entertainer called La Belle Diaperina, and gets to wow the crowds with her singing and dancing, whilst trying to escape the advances of her sleazy manager."War Babies" - In an obvious dig at the French Foreign Legion/Gary Cooper epics of the period, Temple plays a sophisticated cabaret singer who charms the G.I.'s."Kid in Africa" - Temple plays a gun-ho missionary, determined to tame the natives."The Kid's Last Fight" - One of the rare titles. Temple plays the pretty girlfriend of a prizefighter who becomes his lucky charm."The Pie-Covered Wagon" - An hilarious Wild West parody; Temple plays a damsel in distress who gets kidnapped by Indians."Polly-Tix in Washington" - Temple plays a young innocent who is hired to ensure that a senator's campaign becomes the most successful.TECHINICAL DETAILS:Single-sided, single-layer discKeep caseAudio: 2-channel stereo
A**R
Shirley Temple Story Book Collection
I love Shirley Temple and loved the idea of seeing her early work. This collection is very cute, but I couldn't help thinking that what was sweet and innocent back when these movies were made is maybe questionable today. The shorts were very cute, but I just kept imagining the sick world we live in today and the fact that some perverts might get off on the idea of puting babies in grown up situations like this. Unfortunately that's just the world we live in today. That said, these movies were cute and funny and I would imagine back when they were played in theaters they did help bring laughter and fun into peoples lives when things were so tough. The very young children running around in diapers with over sized safty pins in a boxing ring was fun and had us laughing most of the time.
J**9
Great Shirley Temple Collection
Bought this as a Christmas present and it arrived on time and plays great. The DVD arrived unharmed and plays like it should. Does not skip, etc.
K**N
Shirley Temple
We felt this was too early, too corny. Too old for today's kids.
J**O
A peculiar collection
This is a peculiar and rather uncomfortable feature from the early days of Shirley Temple's career. It's rather strange to see such a complete contrast between the innocent, almost syrupy tone of her best-known full-length movies and the risqué, often rather inappropriate nature of many of her early short features. If nothing else, it provides some interesting examples of how the perspectives of the time differed from those of today.Temple, at four years of age, is part of a cast consisting entirely of equally young children (as was also the case in many of her earliest short movies). She plays a dancer who entertains a group of soldiers in a café, soon becoming the source of a rivalry between two of them. Besides the basic story line, there are a lot of isolated gag ideas, many of them using milk in one way or another.The children are depicted as thoroughly amoral characters, leading to a lot of situations that the vast majority of today's viewers would find uncomfortable or even disturbing. Certainly, no film-maker today could film such material using children without suffering irrevocable consequences to his or her career. Setting aside whatever one's personal feelings may be, it points out some very different attitudes or sensitivities - and of course, there are things that are routinely accepted in today's movies that would have provoked nearly universal outrage in the 1940s.If you can set aside the uncomfortable nature of the material, there are probably a handful of amusing moments. The intent was obviously to use the children to satirize adult behavior, and on occasion it works. But, to be painfully honest, it's just not really a very good movie anyway. Besides the racy behavior of the child actors, they threw in some racial stereotypes, apparently just for good measure, and then the constant emphasis on milk is a bit odd in itself.One thing, though, that does stand out is that Temple has an obvious energy and screen presence that transcends both her character and the nature of the material. It's no surprise that she could be spotted and groomed for stardom even while performing in things like this. What's a little less expected is to see such a complete contrast between the movies for which she is usually remembered and the movies that gave her a start.
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