Wednesday's Child (1934) Poster

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5/10
For Edward Arnold fans only
lianfarrer7 May 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Wednesday's Child begins promisingly enough. Edward Arnold scales back his larger-than-life personality just a bit to convincingly play Ray Phillips, a jovial, loving, but often absent father. Karen Morley, even more bland and stiff than usual, is cast as his younger, errant wife, Kathryn. Their son, 11-year-old Bobby, is played by towheaded Frankie Thomas, who bears absolutely no physical resemblance to either parent.

The rapport between Arnold and Thomas immediately invites the viewer into the story. You can see why the boy would adore his warmhearted, fun-loving dad and yearn to spend more time with him. It's also apparent that there's no chemistry between the parents, so it's not surprising that during her husband's long absences, Kathryn takes up with another man. One day, while playing with his buddies, Bobby sees his mother in the arms of her lover, and his world is shattered. The rest of the film deals with his parents' broken marriage and how Bobby gets caught in the middle. It's a story that is all too common today, but certainly quite scandalous back in 1934.

The film starts to go off track when it moves into the more melodramatic aspects of the story. There is a scene where Bobby's parents stand in their bedroom loudly discussing their marriage—with the door to their son's adjacent bedroom wide open! The boy hears his mother say she regrets having married his father and then giving birth to him. He sees his mother slap his father, and then his father return the blow.

The courtroom scene, where Bobby testifies about his father hitting his mother (but not about his mother striking the first blow) is poorly written and hard to believe. It mainly serves to set up the custody arrangement in which Bobby spends school months with his mother and summers with his father. A hokey calendar montage establishes that the child is miserable living with his mother and her new husband. He can't wait to return to his old house to be with his dad.

And that's where the film really goes awry. Bobby and Ray are delighted to be together again. They make plans for a father-son vacation... just the two of them. But when Ray goes out for groceries, his new girlfriend, Louise, arrives and immediately insinuates herself into the family and their vacation plans. In an instant, Ray forgets all about Bobby's feelings. He's oblivious to his son's growing anguish as Louise—a woman he knew nothing about—completely usurps his place in his father's affections. The scene lacks credibility, as does Bobby's physical collapse and subsequent illness.

It goes further downhill from there. Ray Phillips turns into an absolute cad as he and his ex-wife, each absorbed with their new loves, try to foist little Bobby on one another. The boy's doctor suggests an expedient solution to the Bobby problem: pack him off to military school. (Note yet another scene where the adults make painful admissions about the boy within earshot.) At school, Bobby has a hard time adjusting, even when his roommate explains that there are many other boys here under the same circumstances.

In yet another poorly-developed, badly-scripted about-face, Ray Phillips overhears Bobby expressing his unhappiness. He suddenly becomes the good Dad again, deciding to ditch his fiancée and devote the rest of his life to little Bobby. I guess this means he never gets to have his a personal life of his own, unlike his cold-hearted, cheating ex-wife. It's hard to know what to think about the morality of this film.

Too much of Wednesday's Child is centered on the anguish of poor little Bobby. Frankie Thomas is an okay child actor, but not skilled or subtle enough to carry so much of the picture on his young shoulders. Along with the deficiencies in this central performance, the patchy script, tepid directing, sudden changes in the parents' personality and behavior, and vapid acting of Karen Morley prevent this potentially powerful film from rising above mediocrity. A wasted performance from the enormously likable Edward Arnold. Watch Wednesday's Child only if you're one of his fans.
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6/10
Portrait in Agony
btfkelly2 May 2007
Bobby Phillips (Frankie Thomas) is the collateral damage that results in a bitter divorce between Mom (Kay Francis) and Dad (Edward Arnold). Dad's older and travels a lot, Mom's regretful and totally focused on escape. Bobby goes through the intense grief that accompanies such a situation and the script heaps on additional sharp sticks in the eye. We watch Bobby (surrounded by his friends) discover his Mom with another man and later we squirm with him as he testifies at trial against one of his parents.

Post-divorce, we see additional grief heaped upon the adolescent Bobby by the hapless Mom and the oblivious Dad. The story is somewhat heavy handed, but overcomes underplaying (to the point of disappearance) by Kay Francis and overplaying by Edward Arnold, whose trademark laugh could have been meted out in much smaller doses here. To its credit, the script doesn't point the blame at one parent or the other, but focuses on how young Bobby deals with it all. The performance given by Frankie Thomas is somewhat uneven, I think,but he was given a lot of dramatic baggage to deal with and a director who seems to have been asleep at the switch much of the time.

Dave Durand, later of East Side Kids renown (?), is the only supporting player worth mentioning here, as he gives an entertaining and energetic performance as Bobby's school chum mentor. Everyone else seems to have had the life sucked out of them by the black hole of Kay Francis' malaise or caught whatever virus made Edward Arnold go into supernova mode periodically.

This movie deals a heavily stacked deck, but is still moving at times, mostly thanks to Frankie Thomas.
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8/10
Call me sentimental, but this grabbed me by the gut.
mark.waltz8 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Hollywood focused on a series of women's pictures known as "mother love" sagas, showing suffering women pining for their lost child or sacrificing their own happiness for the good of their ungrateful offspring. This overwhelmingly emotional drama is about "father love" where the emotions between father and son tie them together through the infidelity of the mother, witnessed by the young lad. An outstanding young actor, Frankie Thomas Jr., made his debut, and will grab you instantly as the pre-teen son who loves both his parents, but particularly adores his father (Edward Arnold), who gives every waking moment of his rare times at home to make sure his son and wife (Karen Morley) are happy

It's Morley who tears the family apart, having fallen in love with another man during Arnold's mandatory times away. She's no villain, however, as the script shows the decent sides of both parties, as well as their weaknesses. The emotional court case documenting the divorce is followed by the most moving montage of the calendar flowing by as Morley anguishes over her son's misery at being away from his father. But his happiness at being home changes when he learns that his father has moved on with the lovely Shirley Gray.

Certainly a more believable actor than MGM's big three male child stars (Cooper, Bartholomew and especially Rooney), Thomas is a natural, every action of his fresh and true. Arnold tones it down from his gregarious patriarchs and ruthless millionaires and comes off as gentle, loving and fair. Morley acts with her looks of worry and guilt as much as she does with her words. Thomas's real life parents appear in smaller roles. This avoids being melodramatic and tedious, and is perhaps one of the most honest screenplays on this topic in my many years of classic film viewing.
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8/10
The Courtship of Bobby's Father
lugonian14 April 2019
WEDNESDAY'S CHILD (RKO Radio, 1934), directed by John S. Robertson, is not an early screen adaptation about a sibling of Wednesday Addams from "The Addams Family," but a sensitive story about an 11-year-old boy who becomes the center of divorce court involving his parents. Making his motion picture debut is Frankie Thomas in a role he originated on stage earlier in the year of the film's release. Feature billing goes to Edward Arnold and Karen Morley in the opening credits, while Karen Morley and Edward Arnold are credited in that order for its closing casting. Arnold, basically a heavy-set character actor usually in supporting roles since his movie debut in 1932, gets his chance to carry on this photo-play of a loving husband and caring father whose life gets a turnaround after his wife decides she doesn't love him anymore.

The story opens with Ray Phillips (Edward Arnold) camping with his 11-year-old son, Bobby (Frankie Thomas), showing a good bonding relationship between father and son. The next scene follows Bobby and his mother, Kathryn (Karen Morley) bidding farewell to Ray at the train station heading for Florida on a business trip for a month. While playing with his friends, Bobby notices a woman in a car kissing a man, Howard Benson (Robert Shayne) in the front seat. The woman turns out to be his mother. Returning home two weeks earlier from his business trip. Ray is greeted happily by Bobby while his mother returns home, surprised he's home earlier than expected. All she could think about now is telephoning Benson warning him about her husband's arrival without arousing any suspicion, though she has noticed Bobby's strange reaction towards her lately. After Ray learns the truth about Kathryn's illicit affair, Bobby, awaken from their argument in the next room, becomes even more disturbed hearing his mother say she never really wanted Bobby in the first place. At divorce court, the judge (Frank Conroy) awards Kathryn custody of Bobby, with summertime with his father from June until September. Miserable living with his mother and her new husband, Bobby is overjoyed with his summer visitation with his father, until a strange woman, Louise (Shirley Grey), walks into their home. Because of his unhappiness living in both homes at separate times, Ray must decide whether Bobby would be happier away in military school, or come up with a better solution keeping Bobby from his state of depression. Others in the cast include: Paul Stanton (Attorney Keyes); Frank M. Thomas (Attorney for the Defense); Elsa Janssen (Martha, the Swedish Maid); and David Durand (Chick).

A well-acted story as seen through the eyes of a child, Frankie Thomas gives a fine performance in the title role. Though he starred in another movie, A DOG OF FLANDERS (RKO, 1935), he would be more in popular demand as a teenager and beyond, known for such roles as in BOYS TOWN (MGM, 1938) opposite Spencer Tracy; memorably playing Ted Nickerson opposite Bonita Granville in four "Nancy Crew" mysteries for Warner Brothers (1938-39); ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN (Warners, 1941) opposite Fredric March, as well as the title role in television's "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet" (1951-1955), among others. For WEDNESDAY'S CHILD, Thomas honestly shows his true affection towards his father, as any boy would, and his loss of affection towards his mother after finding her to be unfaithful towards his dad. Edward Arnold and Karen Morley do well in their roles, especially Arnold, who's believably likable as a father-like figure. Short and sweet, and overlooking some of slang-talk amongst kids from the 1930s, WEDNESDAY'S CHILD is simply told and well-directed during its 68 minutes.

RKO Radio remade this sensitive story as A CHILD OF DIVORCE (1946) changing the gender from boy to girl, wonderfully played by Sharyn Moffett. The difference between these two screen adaptations is the ending. Both are satisfying but the Moffett remake is effective and tear-inducing to say the least. Though both films are not relatively known or often revived, especially on video cassette or DVD, WEDNESDAY'S CHILD and CHILD OF DIVORCE have had cable television broadcasts either on American Movie Classics (1990s) and once in a while on Turner Classic Movies where each can be seen and compared. (***)
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8/10
Keep a few Kleenex handy when you see this one.
planktonrules18 September 2016
Bobby is a miserable kid--mostly because his parents totally suck. Bobby and his friends discover his mother necking...with another man! Soon, his parents divorce and the boy is forced to live with his selfish mother. But it's not just the mother--Bobby's father is always away on business and just never seems to have any time for the kid. Not surprisingly, the kid is confused and depressed...and yet the parents either don't notice or just don't care. Eventually the poor boy is just shuffled off to a military boarding school after the parents divorce in order to make life easier for the parents! Is there any hope for Bobby?

This is a terribly depressing film (at least until the end) and an excellent film for anyone to see who is contemplating divorce or who wants to have a kid. After all, it manages to show the pain and impact on the kid without being too heavy-handed. Well worth seeing not just for this reason but because it feels so emotionally true and honest. A low-budget, simple but super-effective film that is a bit of a sleeper.
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