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From Riches to Rags: Hollywood and the New Deal

Sunday, April 5, 2009
6:00 p.m. Wild Boys of the Road
William Wellman (U.S., 1933)

Introduced by Harvey Smith


Harvey Smith has worked as a carpenter, public health worker, radio journalist, horse rancher, and teacher. He is an advisor to California’s Living New Deal Project and a board member of the National New Deal Preservation Association.

The most familiar images of the Great Depression are of the men, uprooted and unemployed. But those men were often fathers as well, so what of their children? William Wellman’s bleakly realistic Wild Boys of the Road follows several “juvenile hoboes” from their carefree college idylls to their castaway misfortunes hopping the rails. Eddie (played by Sean Penn precursor Frankie Darro), Tommy (Edwin Philips), and Sally (Wellman’s soon-to-be-wife Dorothy Coonan) travel the tracks, evading the yard bulls while they scavenge for work. All around them other kids accumulate like a transient army, eventually forming a mass encampment in a field of sewer pipes. Wellman’s documentary style keeps the sentimentality at bay while these disenfranchised youth struggle mightily beyond the bounds of family. Pulled into court for delinquency, an outraged Eddie declares, “You don’t want to see us. You want to forget us.” But who could?

—Steve Seid

• Written by Earl Baldwin, based on the story “Desperate Youth” by Danny Ahearn. Photographed by Arthur Todd. With Frankie Darro, Rochelle Hudson, Dorothy Coonan, Arthur Hohl. (68 mins, B&W, 35mm, From Warner Bros.)

Preceded by short:
We Work Again (U.S., 1930). A promo film highlighting the WPA’s impact on the African American population, including a sequence from Orson Welles’s production of Macbeth with an all-black cast. Produced by the Works Projects Administration. (15 mins, B&W, 16mm, From NARA)

• (Total running time: 83 mins)