Penrod and Sam (1923) Poster

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7/10
Charming film about boyhood in the 1920s
silentfilm-220 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Film buffs know William Beaudine from the cheapie schlock that he directed in the sound era and television, but he was quite a talented director in the 1920s. PENROD AND SAM (1923) was the first of three versions of Booth Tarkington's novel; the other two being filmed with sound in the 1930s. Hal Roach's Our Gang series had started a year before this series, and this film has a similar feel. Eugene "Pineapple" Jackson from this film later made it into the Roach gang.

The child actors in this film are all perfect, with Ben Alexander (later of DRAGNET) as Penrod. Buddy Messenger plays the mean bully Rodney Bitts, and his sister Gertrude plays the only girl that is friends with the kids. Except for their tattered clothing which shows that the two African-American kids are poorer than the others, the two black kids are presented as just regular kids and are not stereotyped at all. Rockliffe Fellowes and Gladys Brockwell were stars in the teens. Here they play two loving parents who don't always understand Penrod. Mary Philbin has a small part as Penrod's sister, and Gareth Hughes is her embarrassed boyfriend. Both would go on to much bigger roles. Cameo the dog is an important character in this film, and she has the most heart-breaking scene. (She would repeat her role in the remake.)

Penrod and Sam are two best friends who have their own clubhouse on the vacant lot next to Penrod's house. They get into all kinds of trouble getting back at the local bully Rodney Bitts (Buddy Messinger). They also tease prissy Georgie Bassett (Newton Hall) because his mother dresses him in coordinating outfits and because Georgie doesn't like to get dirty. Rodney's mean father insists that his son be let into the gang, while Georgie's mother pleads that he be let in also. The kids create an awful initiation for Georgie, but the parents stop it before he is treated too badly. (And note that after this Georgie does become a member of the gang.)

The bully Rodney won't be nice to anybody in the gang and cannot be accepted into it. His rich father (William V. Mong) buys the lot next door from Penrod's father. Penrod realizes that Buddy and his father have taken his dog and his clubhouse from him. He and his friends must act to reclaim their clubhouse and their fun. While there are sentimental scenes in the film, there is plenty of comedy and the film holds up perfectly nearly a hundred years later.
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7/10
A Child's Problem Is Still A Problem
boblipton6 May 2021
I read a couple of Booth Tarkington's Penrod books about half a century ago, out of the middle school library and thought them all right. William Beaudine's silent version of the second book -- he would remake it as a talkie in 1931 -- clearly builds on Hal Roach's already successful OUR GANG series, even if the setting is Indiana rather than upstate New York. An early title tells us that the problems of boyhood are universal and timeless, and this makes me believe it. Penrod has three things he cherishes: his dog, Duke -- played by Cameo, who would reprise her role eight years later -- his shack on the lot next door, and his gang. Eventually all three will be taken from him by the incomprehensible workings of the adult world.

I think that is part of what another commenter groups into what he calls 'social satire'. I find nothing satirical about it. I think it's an accurate representation of the selfish and uncaring nature of most people. Ben Alexander, as Penrod, suffers because he has no power, and as a child, is not seen as having any feelings that need to be considered. His father, Rockliffe Fellowes, orders him to let the obnoxious kid into their club because his father, William Mong, is powerful in town. Later, when Mong runs over Penrod's dog and kills him, he offers the boy money, when sympathy might be more helpful. And Penrod's rejection of his standards makes this grown man seek his revenge. It's only by an almost literal deus ex machina that the situation is resolved at all, and not particularly satisfactorily; his dog, in the end, is still dead.

That is the reason I find the first half of the movie, filled with the concerns of boyhood when nothing is final, better than the second half. Still, I always enjoy those OUR GANG shorts which are almost plotless, just filling up an endless weekend day. Normally I enjoy a well told story with a formal plot, and it is here. However, those days of childhood, where my problems were small and inconsequential and easily soluble, are still fresh in my memory, and I mourn their passing and the cares of the adulthood which seemed so desirable at the time. What a fool I was!
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6/10
Penrod's Gang
Cineanalyst4 October 2020
From the 39th Pordenone Silent Film Festival, Jay Weissberg oversold this feature film for Day 1, "Penrod and Sam" (1923), as being similar to "Boyhood" (2014), which, no, it's not really. It's more akin to Our Gang, a.k.a. The Little Rascals, comedy shorts in its episodic slapstick of children running around, hitting each other and generally getting into trouble, but with a dramatic arch that extends the film's length to the feature format. Weissberg also mentioned the relatively decent treatment of the African-American children in the film, which I had by doubts regarding when the two boys were introduced in a pun as "the colors." After that, the film is relatively inoffensive, though, especially for something from 1923. The film also gets off to a bad start with the literal slapstick--fighting with wooden swords--of the kids playing war, but once they start interacting with the adult world and the plotline with the dog gets going, the comedy becomes somewhat amusing, and the drama avoids devolving into sap.

Intertitles are arguably too plentiful, and I don't think the mocking of children's syntax and pronunciations is funny enough to sustain a running gag throughout the picture. Scenes such as of the boys mocking the flirtations of teenagers works better, and the main father and mother are laughably exactly what one would imagine as past suburban stereotypes and predates "Leave It to Beaver" and similar such TV and movies: father in his chair reading the paper, only to get up to reprimand the boys for their latest hijinks, as the literally-pearl-clutching mother brings such matters to father's attention. It's all a little too mainstream wholesome for my taste, but I can certainly see why others would enjoy it, and it's not bad for its kind. It was made, after all, by a director, William Beaudine, whose long career demonstrated his proficiency, from Mary Pickford vehicles to "Billy the Kid Versus Dracula" (1966).

(Note: 35mm, tinted print from Library of Congress.)
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2/10
Unfortunate
ThousandsOfFilms14 December 2014
As a child, I found two of Booth Tarkington's books, "Penrod" and its sequel "Penrod and Sam", to be the funniest I had read. Those two eleven year old boys and their dog, around 1900 AD, were getting into the most hilarious of mischievous scrapes. UNFORTUNATELY, the writers for this film focused primarily on those episodes where Penrod and Sam were getting their revenge on Georgie Bassett, a "goodie-goodie", so it treats the bullying of Georgie as funny and as a positive. "Bullying" is in the spotlight today with a special focus on how destructive it can be - even leading to suicide by the victims - those episodes, which composed the bulk of the film,did not seem very funny. I found it most disappointing. To be fair, the child actors were great and the director got the right flavor for the non-bullying incidents so had the movie been primarily on those types of scrapes, I would have rated this movie at the top of the scale rather than at the bottom.
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