Bad Little Angel (1939) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
13 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
"Let the Bible be your guide"
lugonian25 May 2005
BAD LITTLE ANGEL (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1939), directed by William Thierle, based on the book by Margaret Turnbull, is a harmless, inoffensive cute little movie centering upon a trials and tribulations of a pre-teenage girl whose faith in the Bible points her to the right direction, and how her presence in a town she just happens to choose changes the lives of those around her. This little known and rarely seen "B" movie not only has all the elements of good family viewing, but a message that reveals that everything happens for a reason, even when things seem hopeless, bitterness eventually turns to happiness. While the story might appear like a script for a Shirley Temple movie, by which she might have made a go with such a story, but as fate has it, Temple worked for 20th Century-Fox, not for MGM, thus leaving the studio to entrust itself in offering the part to young Virginia Weidler, a veteran child actress in films since 1934, first at Paramount, later RKO Radio, and finally a resident MGM performer where she would turn out memorable performances supporting Norma Shearer in THE WOMEN (1939) and Katharine Hepburn in THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940). BAD LITTLE ANGEL gives Weidler an opportunity to be the major character. Though this wasn't her first in which she undertook the responsibility in a leading role, she would rarely have such an opportunity on screen again, in spite of her natural charm and wisdom. Sadly her movie career concluded during her adolescent years with a non-lead performance in the musical, BEST FOOT FORWARD (MGM) starring Lucille Ball. But for now, let's concentrate on Weidler, the little star of BAD LITTLE ANGEL. After watching her performance, it seems a pity that she didn't much of an opportunity as a leading child actress. By the time she became a teenager, it's a small wonder that she grew up too fast.

Set in the early 1900s, Weidler undertakes the role as Patricia Victoria Sanderson, better known as "Patsy," an dark-haired orphan sporting pigtails and wearing a little Cross hanging from around her neck, living under the care Mrs. Perkins (Elizabeth Patterson), an elderly woman wheelchair bound. These two lonely souls love and help one another, with Mrs. Perkins teaching Patsy the importance of the Good Book: whenever she gets in trouble and nowhere to turn, she should say a little prayer, open up the Bible and point her finger on a verse on any given page, and accept it as a message from God. (Very interesting concept). Trouble starts knocking at their door when the head of the orphanage comes to take Patsy away, causing Mrs. Perkins to succumb to a heart attack. Back at the orphanage where Patsy originated, the supervisors (Arthur Aylesworth and Esther Dale), of the dreadful place bring her down in saying that she is a jinx to those who take her in. Wanting to escape her surroundings and with no idea where to go, Patsy opens up her Bible, points onto the page that writes about Egypt. Taking her dog with her, Patsy heads over to the nearest train station where she buys a ticket to Egypt, not the Egypt across the ocean, but to a small town in New Jersey. While there she encounters Tommy Wilks (Gene Reynolds), a teenage son of a habitual drunk (Henry Hull), who guides her to the right direction, especially after learning she's an escaped orphan eluding authorities who are after her. Tommy introduces her to Jim Creighton (Ian Hunter), editor of the town newspaper,The Sentinel. He finds himself taking this child home with him where she meets his wife (Lois Wilson) and three children (Ann Todd, Mickey Kuhn and Douglas Madore). All goes well until Creighton loses his job and becomes critically ill, causing Patsy to really believe she is a jinx, but in time, just as she is losing her faith and planning to leave, she opens the Bible once more and comes across a very important verse that really opens her eyes.

A "B" movie running at 73 minutes consists of familiar faces supporting the cast, including Guy Kibbee as the unlikable Luther Marvin; Reginald Owen (Scrooge in 1938s A Christmas CAROL) as Marvin's butler; with Milton Parsons, Mitchell Lewis, Byron Foulger and George Irving in smaller roles.

BAD LITTLE ANGEL might be a misnomer of a title, since the girl is far from bad. The story has warmth, amusement and inspiring message, a sort of movie best presented to children attending Sunday School class, particularly since it has a youngster as the central character, with Weidler being more like an ordinary child than a child performing like an actress. Direction, authentic period settings and acting all get "A" for effort.

BAD LITTLE ANGEL occasionally airs on Turner Classic Movies. To find out when it will be shown again, instead of the Bible, let the website or program listing be your guide. (**1/2)
22 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Another terrific movie from 1939
moonspinner5520 May 2016
An orphaned girl believes she brings back luck to all those who take her in. Actually, it's the opposite: her plucky optimism and faith in the Lord mends fences and brings people together. Although not as well-known as a family picture like "The Wizard of Oz" (released the same year), "Bad Little Angel" has the same overlay of sentiment and uplift--also the same dog! Feisty, determined little Virginia Weidler is perfect in the lead, using the Bible as her guide and escaping a rotten orphanage for Egypt...Egypt, New Jersey, that is. It's fairly easy to knock a movie which goes to such corny lengths for its plot turns (a factory catching fire, a loving husband and father stopping the blaze but getting buried in the rubble, two children rescuing him, etc.), but when the results are delivered in such a heartfelt manner, cynicism no longer applies. MGM clearly wanted 1939 audiences to leave the theater feeling good, and that sincere attribute still resonates. *** from ****
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A little orphaned girl learns to walk like an Egyptian.
mark.waltz18 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This little angel is only bad to those who believe her to be jinxed. That includes the operators of the orphanage she was brought up in, and in true Dickens fashion, she escapes with her dog after the old lady who took her in (Elizabeth Patterson) passes away. Taking along with her pooch Rex, Weidler runs away and decides to go to Egypt after opening the bible for advice like Patterson taught her. Of course, that's Egypt New Jersey where she befriends young Gene Reynolds who introduces her to his hard drinking father's boss (Ian Hunter) who ends up taking her in. With two new surrogate families looking over her, Weidler seems all set for a new life, but this American Dickens like tale is filled with complications before Weidler finds true happiness.

Terry the Dog, as Rex, gets threatened by the male version of Miss Gulch, Arthur Aylesworth, an ironic detail which ties this to the same year's "The Wizard of Oz". Like Dorothy in Oz, young Weidler has a major impact on the new characters in her life thanks to her biblical beliefs, and soon everyone seems to be whistling and skipping.

Henry Hull plays Reynolds' drunken lout of a father who seems to become a better person after Weidler shows up, and then there's the town's grouchy wealthy man (Guy Kibbee) whom Weidler tries to get to see the light, aided by Kibbee's valet, Reginald Owen. Lois Wilson, as Hunter's wife, opens up her home to Weidler, Reynolds and Hull in their times of trouble, even if it means a shortage of food on the table for her own family.

There is an excess of sentimentality here, but it's difficult to dismiss a film that really has the epitome of the real meaning of Christianity and doing what one can for their fellow man. Weidler is far less cloying than Shirley Temple, and there's never that over the top cuteness that made some of Temple's films overly saccharine. There's a little bit of disaster, an appropriate bit of comedy and lots of love going into the making of this, plus sacrifice from the characters whom you'd least expect it coming from. I doubt a situation like this could happen in real life, but this little MGM B film does offer a bit of hope in a dark and cruel world.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
I enjoyed this movie.
kimandco27 July 2002
I thought this was a cute, sentimental movie. Many people might consider it to be sappy, but it was wholesome and sweet. It has a very strong Christian message in it. I was very interested in it and well entertained. I think it would be very good for children to watch.
8 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Culver City Vs. Gower Gulch
boblipton16 April 2024
Orphan Virginia Weidler is a jinx. Every time she is put with some one, they go broke or die. Following the advice of one of the ones who died, she prays, opens a Bible to a random page, jabs a finger, and follows instructions by going to Egypt, New Jersey. There she is sort of adopted by newspaper editor Ian Hunter and his wife, Lois Wilson, and makes friends with Gene Reynolds. Hunter promptly loses his job through a dispute with local skinflint Guy Kibbee, who blocks anyone from hiring him.

Miss Weidler annoys me a bit by the trick of emphatic delivery of every line, but she takes visual direction pretty well. There's a nice fire scene. Over all, though, this strikes me as the sort of movie you got out of Gower Gulch. With the resources that Louis Mayer could throw at it, including Dorothy Yost to do the screenplay and John Seitz to handle the camera, it is quite watchable despite its simplistic, hectoring tone and Reginald Owen in the cast.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Delightful and Funny Tale of Innocence and Faith
robert-temple-130 March 2009
The truly delightful Virginia Weidler is at her most engaging as an innocent teenage orphan in this film excellently directed by Austrian émigré William Thiele. She is supported by a host of splendid character actors of the period such as Elizabeth Patterson and Guy Kibbee. The film has some truly hilarious moments and is most entertaining. The South African actor Ian Hunter is wonderful as the ever-cheerful adoptive father who battles corruption in his town with fearless intrepitude, risking ruin for his whole family. And Gene Reynolds is perfect as the young boy who befriends Virginia. Reynolds had come fresh from his excellent work earlier in the year in 'They Shall Have Music' with violinist Jascha Heifetz (one of the best such musical films ever made), and he later ended up as the producer of the TV series 'Mash'. The girl played by Virginia is deeply religious in a conventional Southern Baptist way, and opens the Bible at random to receive a message from the Lord in exactly the same manner that Oliver Cromwell used to do in the 17th century. Although this film may seem 'deeply religious' now, in this far more secular age, there was nothing at all unusual about the story in 1939, and it was not made as a religious film at all, but as a comedy fable. If it had been of truly religious intent, it would not have made such jokes out of the Biblical passages. Early in the film, Virginia is fleeing the horrible orphanage, having been instructed by the Bible to 'flee into Egypt'. She goes to the train station and asks for a ticket to Egypt, and is told blandly that that will be one dollar and fifty cents. The ticket turns out to be to Egypt, New Jersey. This film is a wonderful joyride, highly recommended to all who can laugh and to all who can cry, and Virginia Weidler was a marvellous presence on the screen, a child actor who was far from beautiful but whose personality shone.
16 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
You Have To See This To Believe It!
ccthemovieman-113 October 2005
The headline is true, except I should say "has to be HEARD" to be believed. That's because this is so far far removed from anything ever produced in Hollywood, as far as I know. In fact, you would guess some Christian organization made this movie, not mainstream Hollywood, even in 1939.

The unique theme of this movie? Believing in the Bible. Wow, what a novel concept!

The lead character in here, played wonderfully by Virginia Weidler, is an 11 or 12-year-old girl who starts off sentences with, "Well....the Bible says."....or "The Lord told me.." And she's proved right, time after time.

It's a short (72-minute) story about a girl who runs away from home, finds a family, and then helps her "adopted" father with a major problem. Along the way, she transforms a young ruffian and his drunken father, and a grumpy old man who owns the town. This girl - with Scripture in hand - does it all!

It isn't simply a corny, overly sentimental film, although those certainly are ingredients in this mix. There also is drama, action, romance and humor....a little bit of everything.

This is a wonderful, unique film. Sad to say it's never been available on tape or disc. Too bad, because there is a sizable Bible-believing audience out there hungry for something as refreshing as this.
30 out of 38 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
A strange semi-religious film from MGM
planktonrules18 September 2015
"Bad Little Angel" features young Virginia Weidler in the lead. She's an orphan being raised by an old lady, Mrs. Perkins. Mrs. Perkins is a very religious lady and convinces Patsy that any time you need an answer you should randomly open the Bible and pick a verse to read. They try it and find a verse that talks about fleeing to Egypt and Patsy believes it. So, when soon after the old lady dies, instead of going back to the orphanage, Patsy literally runs off to Egypt. This Egypt, however, is a small American town of that name. There, she finds new friends and a family to care for her.

If this all sounds preachy in a bizarre sort of way, that's pretty much the case. While the film is never terrible, it does convey some rather strange messages. It makes me wonder what little Patsy would have done had she randomly opened the Bible and it happened to be the book "Song of Solomon". Strange and even occasionally good...but not occasionally enough.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Uplifting Film, strong Moral message
SumBuddy-31 August 2005
Okay, I'll admit I was in tears watching this film. Virginia Wiedler was a wonderful alternative to the Shirley Temple/Margaret O'Brien acting style, and I really like her sincerity without the "sugar coating" that Shirley and Margaret always added.

Wonderful supporting characters, (although more important), since she played an orphan, and was constantly looking for guidance and acceptance. The Father figure, the boyfriend, his alcoholic father, and the other character actors made this a balanced film. Christian overtones wouldn't get it through to the big screen these days, but this was 1939. Late in the Depression, Christian thinking was very strong. Worth watching!
19 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Very uplifting
duda-tuppence27 December 2015
This movie makes us believe that there is still goodness in this crappy world. I watched on the 26 of Dec and was in the mood for a movie that shows people's good side, if we only give them a chance to be, if we believe they could only be. No, i'm not naïve, have gone through my share of suffering, and will till the end of my life, but oddly enough, i believe in people, in love and in God.

No, still not naïve - how can a lawyer be naïve? But i believe that as there is bad in men, there is also good and that is this movie shows. It is very worth a try, if you still have a little faith in humanity. And even if you don't have it - it may be a good start to it.

10 stars.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Weidler Carries The Show
dougdoepke14 June 2017
As an atheist, ordinarily I'd steer clear of religiously themed shows. Too often they're sanctimoniously smug with their Christian message. On the whole, however, this little MGM programmer manages to avoid most of the pitfalls, and I watched all the way through.

Shrewdly, the religious theme is carried by the charming little Patsy. As the little girl, 11-year old Weidler is anything but sanctimonious in her reliance on the Bible as a guide for her future. An orphan, Patsy is hoping for a home after running away from a cruel orphanage. Due to the late Mrs. Perkins' influence, the orphan uses Biblical passages chosen at random as God's wisdom in guiding her. The book's a substitute parent, as it were. At the same time, however, she thinks herself a jinx because she seems to leave misfortune in her wake, as when kindly Mr. Creighton is seriously injured, which Patsy blames on her jinx. Which of these influences will prevail amounts to the plot's crux.

It's not surprising that an 11-year old orphan, now footloose, would hunger for emotional backup that a source like the Bible could provide. Thus, I didn't object to the Bible's use in that regard. Of course, that the passages would be so wisely relevant when picked at random is pure Hollywood contrivance. Nonetheless, the unheralded Weidler carries the film in winning style.

All in all, the movie's fairly heart-warming without being sappy. Plus, the special effects from the factory fire are worthy of an A-production. For a non-believer like me, the 70-minutes works pretty well as a human interest story, whatever else might be gleaned.

(In passing—Catch Patsy's pig-tails, a popular hair style among little girls of the time, which gave mischievous little boys like me a chance to pull on them! But only if we liked the girl. For sure, I would have tugged on Patsy's.)
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Wonderful-Put me on the list to buy if it ever comes out on DVD
donnie_8247 August 2012
I DVR'd this movie on a whim and was glad I did. It was a delightful movie that I did not want to end. This movie = Shirley Temple times 2! The movie kind of has a "Wizard of Oz" feel to it. And I knew I recognized that little dog as "Toto" from the Wizard of Oz. The main character played by Virginia Weidler was very easy to fall in love with. And her acting was outstanding - especially for the year this movie was made. It's hard to imagine a Hollywood that embraces the Bible. Makes me want to go back in time to a day when mentioning God in public was not taboo. I don't collect movies but if this ever comes out on DVD I will definitely buy it. What a great Christmas present this would make!
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
good Christian movie
SnoopyStyle13 April 2024
Patricia Victoria 'Patsy' Sanderson (Virginia Weidler) is an orphan under the care of god-fearing Mrs. Perkins who dies suddenly. She is put back into the orphanage. She follows the old lady's advise and reads the Bible for direction in life. She reads about Egypt in the Bible and runs away to Egypt, New Jersey.

I love this premise. It is a fun concept with plenty of morality and sweetness already built-in. Virginia Weidler is a good child star who retired in her teens. She may not be the biggest star but she has the natural innocence required for the role. I wonder if anyone is making a remake.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed