Rating: G
Genre:
Musical
Release Date: 11/22/2005
SubTitles: English/Espanol
Dubbed: English/Espanol
Sound: DD1/DD2
Run Time: 80 Minutes
Flags: Child Classic
Distributor/Studio: 20th Century Fox
Previously filmed in 1917 and 1932,
Kate Douglas Wiggins' bucolic novel
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm is herein refashioned--and completely, totally, utterly rewritten--as a vehicle for 10-year-old
Shirley Temple. Unable to land a radio contract for himself and his niece Rebecca Winstead (
Temple), fly-by-night vaudevillian Henry Kipper (
William Demarest) leaves the girl in the care of her aunt, Miranda Wilkins (
Helen Westley), who runs a little farm with the help of hired hands Homer (
Slim Summerville) and Aloysius (
Bill Robinson). Miranda has an intense dislike for "show folks", but her next-door neighbor Anthony Kent (
Randolph Scott), a talent scout for a major radio network, sees great possibilities in the talented Rebecca and secretly arranges an audition. In short order, Rebecca becomes the biggest sensation on the airwaves, whereupon the mercenary Kipper returns out of nowhere and demands that Miranda return the girl to his care. By now, Rebecca and Miranda have grown to love one another dearly, and the girl doesn't want to leave the farm, but she does what she is told--only to foil the conniving Kipper with a convenient last-minute "illness" (a scene that provides a showcase role for
Franklin Pangborn) as a nervous standby organist). Future
Titanic costar
Gloria Stuart appears as Gwen Warren, obligatory love interest for Anthony Kent. Musical highlights include a medley of hit tunes from
Shirley Temple's previous films (including, inevitably, "
On the Good Ship Lollipop"), and a climactic tap duet spotlighting
Temple and the inimitable
Bill Robinson, danced to the tune of
Raymond Scott's "
Toy Trumpet".
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide