Product Details
Wild Boys of the Road

Wild Boys of the Road
Directed by William A. Wellman

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Product Details

  • Format: NTSC
  • Running time: 68 minutes

Customer Reviews

Pre-Code Masterpiece!5
Wild Boys of the Road is a wonderful example of early 1930s social drama. It is rarely seen today, but, those who are fortunate to see it don't forget it! It is the story of two boys growing-up in small town America during the early Depression. When each boy is forced to grow up quickly, and earn money for thier struggling families, they decide to runaway to the big city to make a living. Hitching on trains along the Mid-west, they run into a girl, who disguised as a boy, is traveling from Seattle to live with her wealthy aunt in Chicago. Inviting the boys to join her, they arrive at her Aunts apartment just in time for a Police raid -her Aunt runs a Whorehouse! The further adventures of this trio, take them on an odyssey of a society falling apart, hoovervilles, rape, gangsters, riots, and an amputated leg. Hard-hitting direction by William A. Wellman make this film a must-see Classic!

On the Road-- 1930's Style4
Mention the Great Depression and most folks draw a blank or nod off. After all, who wants to be reminded of soup kitchens, dour old men, and dust bowls. Seventy years later and it's a closed book, forgotten and unlamented. Now and again, however, that dusty book needs re-opening. Because, in spite of the best efforts of the best of us, the past is not alway past. This edgy little Warner Bros. production provides a brief picture of the youth of that day, a harrowing story of survival amidst economic collapse.

The movie wouldn't work so well without the contrast the first half-hour provides. Darro and friends are typical middle-class teens, fun-loving and care-free. It's a world of proms, necking parties, and harmless pranks. Then without warning things change. Why they change is never really explained which is the way it should be. For most kids knew nothing of stock markets and dis-investment. They only knew that suddenly Dad doesn't go to work anymore and mom cries a lot, bills pile up, and no one gets a job, anywhere. Middle-class privilege plunges into no-income poverty, and Darro and his buddy do like millions of others. They hop a freight, hoping the next town, the next state, the next someplace, will give them a chance to make a living. What they get instead are private armies, battalions of cops, and a forest of billy clubs. They're driven on to the next jurisdiction and the next welcoming committee. Nobody wants the footloose unemployed adding to their own local problems. Maybe the attitude's not charitable, but it does make practical sense.

The battles atop freight cars and in hobo jungles are expertly filmed and dynamically staged, a stark panorama of social desperation. These scenes make up the movie's centerpiece. If anything they're mildly presented compared to the actual blood-letting that surrounded the desperate and up-rooted. Union organizing was especially bloody and bitterly fought-- an explosive topic Hollywood has only timidly touched on over the years. Nonetheless, the nail-biting episode on the train track stands-in for at least some of the actual pain and suffering caused by those crisis years.

Darro may be small, but he's energetic, something of a younger Cagney. His determined spirit to keep going no matter what is convincing, and helps drive the others on. I expect it also had that effect on audiences of the day. I like the way director Wellman suggests the kids can set up their own constructive community, if given half-a-chance. Some folks complain about the final scene with the understanding judge. Yes, it is pretty contrived, but it wasn't unrealistic given the package of New Deal reforms then in the works. If those measures didn't exactly solve the economic crisis (only WWII did that), they at least offered hope that the problems would no longer be kicked down the road to the next jurisdiction.

Wild Boys may not be the most honest or best movie on those tumultuous years. Still, it does furnish a provocative and entertaining glimpse. In any event, some books should not remain closed. After all, who knows when the unfortunate history of that era may again repeat itself.

wild boy of the road5
this is a great movie with a list of stars in there youngest apperance
like the guy that does the voice of winnie the pooh. its frankie darro in his best film. his dad lost his job so frankie sells his car and runs away from home by hoping a steam rail train with a friend in the same boat. he meets a girl, his friend gets run over by a train and has to have he legs cut off, some really great train scenes in this movie like i never seen before, i hope they make this movie on dvd. i do already owne it. but would love to see it on dvd. frankie darro is one of the great actors of all time that history has fogoten. what a shame