Boy of the Streets (1937) Poster

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5/10
Rebel With a Cause
lugonian24 September 2010
In Michelle Vogel's 2006 book, "Marjorie Main: The Life and Films of Hollywood's 'Ma Kettle," the author lists BOY OF THE STREETS as one with: "Prints of this street kid drama seem to have disappeared, so the basic plot outline is all that exists today." BOY OF THE STREETS (Monogram, 1937), directed by William Nigh, is far from being a lost film, having turned up on cable television during its earliest years in the 1980s, to its availability on home video from Movies Unlimited, and finally its presentation on Turner Classic Movies where it premiered November 6, 2008. Jackie Cooper, former child star of such 1931 hits as THE CHAMP (MGM) and SKIPPY (Paramount), heads the cast not as a homeless teen living off the streets of New York but that of a tough high school drop out and gang leader living under the care of his parents in the city's poor district. To fill in the gap to what might have been described in the published tribute to Marjorie Main and her films, here's an analysis to this little known social drama.

The opening scene introduces kids gathered together in masks and costumes celebrating Halloween on the streets of New York's 9th Avenue district. The peaceful evening is soon disrupted by a series of prank phone calls leading the police and firemen arriving to what's turned out to be false alarms. In due time, Chuck Brennan (Jackie Cooper) and his gang are caught and sent to night court, with the desk sergeant to dismiss the case. O'Rourke (Robert Emmett O'Connor), the good natured cop raised in that district, believes all the boys need is a chance in life. While Chuck idolizes his father (Guy Usher), his long suffering mother, Mary (Marjorie Main) hides the fact that her husband, who hasn't worked in ten years, is nothing but a no good loafer. In spite of Brennan's goal forming a union for soda jerks, nothing really comes of it. Living in the same building is Nora (Maureen O'Connor), a sweet Irish girl whose mother has been sent by ambulance to the hospital for treatment of tuberculous. To help Nora, Chuck arranges for her to earn a living singing at Pete's Grotto, but soon loses the job because she's under age. With no place to go, the Brennans look after Nora rather than having her taken away by the Children's Aide Society. In an effort to support himself, Chuck learns the awful truth about his father acting as stooge or "Yes Man" to a local businessman (Fred Kelsey) rather than attending to business appointments. Losing his chance in joining the Navy, Chuck teams up with Blackie (Matty Fain), a racketeer who steers this rebellious teen to the wrong direction.

Also participating in the story is Julie Stone (Kathleen Burke), a rich girl who, after inheriting the building called "rat traps," not only gets her first hand view of poverty life, but teams up with Doctor Allan (Gordon Elliott) in an attempt to help make a difference for the tenement people.

Basically patterned upon the success of Sidney Kingsley's 1935 play and Samuel Goldwyn's 1937 motion picture, DEAD END (1937), each featuring Marjorie Main as the slum mother to a racketeer, BOY OF THE STREETS is simply routine melodrama. Main's performance here bears little difference from her role in DEAD END, from her uncombed pull-back hair to second-hand clothing, though lipstick and little make-up take away from the realism of her portrayal. The only time the familiar Main persona shines through is when she pretends to be Nora's mother in order to mislead the investigating social workers.

Nora, enacted by O'Connor, in her motion picture debut, provides much of the vocalization to such tunes as "Did Your Mother Come from Ireland?" (by Michael Carr and Jack Kennedy); "Carelessly," (by Charles and Nick Kenny); "Those Foolish Things Remind Me of You" and "Sweet Low, Sweet Chariot." Although resembling that of Universal's ever popular Deanna Durbin by way of singing and mannerism, no further O'Connor films were made by Monogram or any other studio.

With Jackie Cooper being the only familiar face in the group of kids, Paul White, the black member of his gang who later risks his life to save another, stands out with his secondary role. Predating Monogram's own "East Side Kids" series (1940-1945) featuring Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall and Bobby Jordan by way of screenplay and dramatic situations, BOY OF THE STREETS, though never spawned any sequels of its own, did provide Cooper in similar boy of the streets theme with Monogram's GANGSTER'S BOY (1938) and STREETS OF NEW YORK (1939), yet nothing compared to the "East Side Kids" nor Leo Gorcey's charisma as leader of the pack.

Slightly longer than the usual 60 to 70 minute programmers, BOY OF THE STREETS, at 77 minutes, looks more like a Universal product than Monogram. In spite of certain situations depicted in the screenplay not fully resolved, and a chance to see Marjorie Main early in her career, the film makes a satisfactory Depression-era theme time capsule. (**1/2)
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5/10
Down at Pete's Grotto
JohnSeal15 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Clearly modeled on bigger budgeted affairs such as Dead End, this decent Monogram production benefits from surprisingly good cinematography by Gilbert Warrenton and a not at all terrible performance from Jackie Cooper as Lower East Side bad boy Chuck. Chuck wants to be a big shot like his old man, but is foiled in his efforts to make a singing star out of plain jane neighbor Norah (Maureen O'Connor, who, mythical IMDb credits aside, never made another film). Enraged by his failure as a showbiz entrepreneur, Chuck falls in with local gangster Blackie (Matty Fain), who uses the lad as a stooge. Also of note is a reasonably restrained Marjorie Main as Chuck's Ma, and Paul White's sympathetic and not overly stereotypical turn as African-American street urchin Spike. There's nothing here you haven't seen before, but it's delivered and packaged well and will hold your attention.
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6/10
Social Drama
boblipton6 November 2008
Monogram tries its hand at producing a social drama on the order of DEAD END or ONE-THIRD OF A NATION. Jackie Cooper gives a high-energy performance as a leader of a street gang, but the entire production slides over into standard melodrama. Neither does the cheap production value help -- even though it might seem to for a film of this sort. However, the photography by Gilbert Warrenton is a little too glossy for the piece.

Guy Usher as Jackie's father and Margorie Main as his mother give fine performances, and the movie may be the first feature to use the standard "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" in its soundtrack, but despite its aspirations, director William Nigh never seems to manage much of either great significance or entertainment.
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6/10
Big Talk about Big Deals
bkoganbing26 September 2013
A great deal more social commentary got into Boy Of The Street than you would normally find in a Monogram Production about the Lower East Side of New York. Jackie Cooper has the lead in this one and while it looks like a Bowery Boys movie it most certainly is not.

Jackie is a teen gang leader who idolizes his old man and his big talk about big deals he's cooking up with the political bosses of the area. Father is played by Guy Usher who is just waiting for his ship to come in rather than go to work. Mom is Marjorie Main who's had a reality check along time ago about her husband.

Several plot elements fit into Boy In The Street. Of course there is Jackie and his gang. Secondly there's a young girl played by Maureen Connor who has the snoops of the Children's Aid Society asking about her. The doctor who runs the neighborhood clinic and the new landlord of the building where they all live Bill Elliott and Kathleen Burke find a solution.

Lastly there is Jackie's wake up call when he finds that the big bosses downtown have his father down as just a tinhorn chiseler that bones get thrown to every now and then. That knowledge drives Jackie to work for gang leader Matty Fain with some bad consequences.

That is indeed Bill Elliott soon to be cowboy hero playing the doctor. And another part worth noting is George Cleveland who is actually a flunky to the flunky. He's the one I remember best from the film. And also to be noted is Robert Emmett O'Connor as the quintessential Irish- American beat cop, a type that has vanished forever.

Boy Of The Streets will be a pleasant surprise for you if you're expecting some of the lowbrow hijinks of The Bowery Boys.
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7/10
Surprisingly good "Dead End" drama without the Bowery Boys.
mark.waltz18 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
After seeing this film and comparing it to Mickey Rooney's "Boy's Town" performance, I am convinced that Jackie Cooper would have been much better in that part. Rooney's overplaying of the sneering teen that reforms after Spencer Tracy takes him under his wing was the only wrong detail of that 1938 film. Made at the same time as the film version of "Dead End", which would create the "Dead End" kids, "East Side Kids", and "Bowery Boys", "Boy of the Streets" is an amazingly great Monogram film that held my attention with its details and fine performances. At the very beginning, a group of teens play Halloween pranks that ends up with them being arrested. A good-hearted but stereotypical New York Irish cop comments that these boys are misunderstood and have had no other choice but to become what they are because their environment has made them that way. It's tragic, he concludes, but it's up to them to try and change things.

His parents, played by Marjorie Main and Guy Usher, live in a Bowery tenement that actually appears to be one of the nicer apartments in the building, although Main is appropriately weather beaten and blames Usher for their son's lack of direction. Main is both soft and hard in her multi-dimensional performance that shows her inner heartbreak and her anger at their situation. Pal Maureen O'Connor is a teen-aged neighbor whose mother is sent to an institution, so she turns to singing to make ends meet. This brings in the children's aide society so new tenement owner Kathleen Burke steps in and arranges for O'Connor to go to her boarding school. Like life, these character's dramas go up and down like a teeter totter, particularly changed when tragedy strikes one of Cooper's gang members. This creates a impressively powerful dramatic moment for Main whose verbal explosion sets the course for the rest of the film.

There are moments between the two gangs who fight several times that remind me of the tensions yet to develop years later with "West Side Story". The obvious Italian gang is very similar to the Puerto Rican Sharks of "WSS", while Cooper's gang represent what would later become the Jets of that classic stage and film musical. The inclusion of young black Paul White as one of Cooper's pals (sort of a mascot) is a major standout among the young cast members. He reminded me of "Sunshine Sammy" Morrison from the later "Bowery Boys" movies, and I was actually surprised to find out it wasn't him playing the part. The character is written with less stereotyping than normal for that era, making for better writing and great sadness when the tragedy erupts. Yes, it is obvious that the film was created to take advantage of the "Dead End" success, but there is a great deal of humanity underlying the film that makes it equally as memorable on its own.

Cooper is excellent in this film, and only once does he resort to sulky dramatics he used in "The Champ". But its so fast that it's almost unnoticeable. Cooper doesn't seem actually to be acting; He simply just "is", and that's exactly what this character requires, even when he has to react to what he learns about his ne'er-do-well father.

One quibble with the character of the doctor, played by Bill Elliott. When he first meets Kathleen Burke, she mentions she is the NEW owner. He proceeds to tell her off, not even listening to what she had said or why she was there. He has no other choice but to save face later, but it is an interesting character quirk to have picked up on. Fortunately, while it it assumed that a romance develops between the two, it is never brought up to make for phony romance in a film that just doesn't need it. The film does well with everything it has concerning the teens and the hardships they face, and that's fine enough.
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3/10
Jackie Cooper's star is on the decline...
planktonrules14 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
During the early 1930s, there certainly wasn't any child star in Hollywood bigger than Jackie Cooper. In fact, he was so popular and highly praised that he even got an Oscar nomination during this time--and the crowds adored him. However, following his success in MGM's "The Devil is a Sissy", suddenly you see the boy in this film--by a poverty row studio such as Monogram! Talk about a come-down--it's sort of like being a starter for the New York Yankees one season and being sent to a AA ball club the next! It seems that Cooper's star was no longer on the rise--quite possibly because he was now in his mid-teens and was no longer that adorable kid he had been. Now he wasn't ugly or anything--just a normal 15 year-old--and back in 1937, no one seemed all that interested in 15 year-olds in films! Other ways you can see that Cooper's career was in serious decline are the limpness of the film and the insistence of Monogram in inserting their own Deanna Durbin-style singer throughout the film. This girl could sing but had no screen presence at all---and seriously detracted from the film and often overshadowed Cooper. Wow...how much difference a year and a different studio could make!

The plot is pretty familiar as it's one of many social commentary films made during the 1930s (one of the more popular styles of film at the time--and usually something you'd see from Warner Brothers). A young lady inherits an apartment building in the poor part of town (though it really didn't look THAT bad). The people there are a pathetic lot and there's a well-meaning but annoying doctor who works with them--and yells at the new owner even though he had no idea that she was innocent of his tirades. Naturally in the movie world this means they'll soon be in love! Overall, nothing particularly new or inspiring--just a low-budget mess with a now fading child star.

By the way, if you get a chance, try watching this film immediately after his previous film ("The Devil is a Sissy"). The drop in Cooper's voice is dramatic and he sure looks quite a bit older. Plus now, inexplicably, his blond hair is quite brown. And, the production values for this earlier film are about 1493923% better!
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7/10
Jackie Cooper Leaves a Dead End Job
wes-connors20 September 2010
It's Halloween in an Irish New York City slum. Sixteen-year-old hoodlum Jackie Cooper (as Chuck Brennan) and his gang get in trouble for making some prank telephone calls. Home from the police station, Mr. Cooper worries mother Marjorie Main (as Mary), who feels her son will grow up like boozy good-for-nothing father Guy Usher. The family's poor tenement is enchanted by young Maureen O'Connor (as Nora) singing "Did Your Mother Come from Ireland?"

Sadly, Ms. O'Connor's tubercular mother is taken to a sanitarium. When not scuffling with rival gang members, Cooper and his pals help O'Connor get a singing gig, but the moralistic "Children's Aid Society" interferes...

Cooper left MGM and the peroxide to continue his teenage career elsewhere. Monogram Pictures was a poorer studio, but Cooper gives this social consciousness drama a richer performance than anyone expected; he received good notices and won a "National Board of Review" award. "Boy of the Streets" obviously rides on the coattails of the recently released "Dead End" (with Ms. Main) but plays ahead of its curve by including Paul White (as Spike), a relatively admirable ethnic gang member.

******* Boy of the Streets (12/8/37) William Nigh ~ Jackie Cooper, Maureen O'Connor, Marjorie Main, Paul White
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5/10
With Jerry Mathers as the thiever...
AlsExGal6 August 2023
... I swear there is a supporting actor among the street kids in this one that is a spitting image of Jerry Mathers of Leave It to Beaver Fame, but I digress.

This is one of Jackie Cooper's first post-pubescent roles. Cooper had to leave MGM after he was no longer the cute little kid. Because there is a name for the 30s child stars MGM kept around after puberty, and that name is Mickey Rooney. He is actually 15 here playing a boy, Chuck Brennan, who is 16-17 years old. He lives in a New York tenement, has his own loosely organized street gang that frequently has it out with a neighboring street gang, plays pranks on the police, and partakes in some light thievery and fist to cuffs. His mother (Marjorie Main) is worn down by life and by the broken promises of her husband, who claims he is a political operative but is actually just a poser. Nora is a well liked neighborhood teen girl whose mother has been sent to a sanitarium for tuberculosis treatment, and she is in danger of being picked up by the authorities and sent to what amounts to a work house for orphans. Complications and social problems related to generational poverty ensue.

If I had a finer graded rating system I would probably give this one a 5.5 rather than a 5/10. The script is plodding and the dialogue has all of the finesse of Ed Wood, but there are three good actors here - Jackie Cooper, Robert Emmett O'Connor playing a cop as he so often and so skillfully did, and Marjorie Main just as she was getting noticed and before she got picked up by MGM. Their performances save the film. This was the only filmed appearance of Maureen O'Conner who plays Nora. Unfortunately, Monogram seems to be unsuccessfully trying to make her into their own Deanna Durbin with her operatic screeching. I can't blame Ms. O'Conner - This was something all of the studios were trying to copy, usually with very limited success.
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6/10
Earnest Effort To Depict Urban Poverty.
rmax3048234 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Rather a surprise from Monogram Studios -- home of the lavish blockbusters. Jackie Cooper is a teen aged leader of a New York street gang. His father is a big windbag who accomplishes nothing much but is still a moral man. Cooper's mother, Marjorie Main, has a role that limits her to whining and nagging. The three live in a tenement.

Cooper quit school three years ago and is adrift except for a bit of vandalism, which the cope tolerate amiably. Like everyone else in the movie, the cops are Irish. They are far more tolerant than the NYPD that I grew up with. Twice my gang was caught peeping through the window of a lesbian bar in Greenwich Village and the local police officer loved sneaking up behind us with his baton and playing our heads like a xylophone.

The self sacrifice of one of the gang compels Cooper to consider his position in life, which is not so hot. There are few jobs available. This is 1937, during what's now called the "mini-depression." The Navy turns him down because he's a few months shy of seventeen. So Cooper takes up with the gangster, Blackie, and reveals the secrets of the neighborhood shops, such as skylights that are left unlocked. A final shoot out brings about a comforting resolution.

I was most interested in the humanistic doctor, Gordeon Elliott, later to become "Wild Bill Elliott" in the cheap Westerns of Saturday afternoon matinées. He, his resonant baritone, his quick draw, and straight-arrow Weltanschauung were a beacon to me. Since then I've never shot a man who didn't deserve it.

It's not a very challenging movie. There are good guys and bad guys. Some of the reckless kids, like Cooper and his gang, and even the gang's rivals, come to their senses after good old Spike gets run over by a truck while trying to stop a brawl. That's about it. A more sophisticated and, in fact, gripping film about poverty in New York is "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," though the film is a watered-down rendition of the novel.

The final scene has Cooper in uniform, saying good-bye to his beaming family and friends, as he is taken out to the heavy cruiser, USS Houston. Bad luck. After the war broke out, the Houston was damaged several times and finally sunk at the Battle of Sunda Straits. Of her original crew of 1061, 368 survived.

Still, it's nice to see Monogram try something timely and engaging. Their bread and butter was John Wayne in primitive Westerns, with the hero packing a six gun and galloping his white stallion through the telephone poles to catch a pick-up truck full of black-hatted cowboys.
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4/10
A teen Jackie Cooper was pretty good in the okay Boy of the Streets
tavm1 January 2015
After years of being at M-G-M, Jackie Cooper was now a teen whose cuteness was no more though he did look pretty handsome growing up. Still, the studio no more wanted him, neither for awhile did the other major studios so for a while, he ended up at Monogram-a poverty row studio. This was his first movie for them. It has him portraying a member of a tough street gang who're playing phone pranks though he doesn't make the calls but an African-American member (Paul White) does. I'll stop there and just say Cooper wasn't too bad though the story seems to meander sometimes from his encouraging a girl teen (Maureen O'Connor) to audition for a nightclub singing job even though she's underage to a brief misunderstanding between a doctor (Gordon Elliot) and a society woman (Kathleen Burke) who's the new owner of the tenement building that seem to hint of some kind of romance though it's thankfully not carried through. Besides Cooper, the only other recognizable face here was that of Marjorie Main, who previously appeared in the play and film that inspired this one-Dead End, and who'd get more lasting fame as the Ma in the Ma and Pa Kettle films. In summary, Boy of the Streets was okay for what it was, nothing more.
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7/10
Easy Peek at Depression Era Slums and Shows Plenty of Hope
LeonLouisRicci4 December 2014
Monogram, a Distinctive Low Budget Studio Shows Here it Could Make a Movie that Looked Like a Major Studio. In This Social Depression Era Drama Jackie Cooper Falling from the Grace of Big Budget Successes is Still Able to Make the Central Character Believable, Charming, and Effective.

An Exceptional Performance from Ma Kettle Star (Marjorie Main) Add to the Ambiance of the Downtrodden People Residing in the Slums. There are Rival Teen Gangs Spitting at Each Other and Engaging in Fisticuffs, and a Mob Element that Shoots Anything in Sight.

Overall, it is a Good Peek at the Low Life Environs and the Movie Delivers a Good Story with an Upbeat Ending. The Script is Above Average and Characters All Ring True. For a Positive Spin on Life in the Undergrowth, the Ending May be a Bit too Quick and Hokey, but Provides a Dream, from the Dream Factory of 1930's B-Movie Hollywood.
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6/10
"He is growing up to be like you... another no-good!"
classicsoncall22 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Monogram's "Boys of the Streets" and Samuel Goldwyn's "Dead End" both came out in 1937, so one would be hard pressed to decide if either picture influenced the other. The Dead End Kids, by virtue of their reemergence in other films and revived as the East Side Kids and later The Bowery Boys, had a more recognizable cast of characters, whereas the only youthful gang member recognizable here is Jackie Cooper, no longer the cute child star of Hal Roach's Rascals and "The Champ". By the same token, he doesn't have the wise-cracking charisma of a gang leader like Leo Gorcey, so his appearance here is more on the order of a street-smart hoodlum willing to take short cuts to make ends meet in his lower-class neighborhood. It doesn't help that his father (Guy Usher) is a no-account toady for a local businessman, a fact when learned by Cooper's character Chuck, has him reevaluate his life after a string of misfortunes.

I liked Marjorie Main in this one, even as she portrayed the world-weary Mom of Chuck Brennan, her role calling for a subdued performance unlike those of a character she made famous with the introduction of Ma Kettle in 1947's "The Egg and I". Mary Brennan plays along with local beat cop Rourke (Robert Emmett O'Connor) when he brings sixteen-year-old Nora (Maureen O'Connor) to the family's door, pinched for singing underage in a speakeasy. That too was arranged by Chuck, figuring he'd cash in on a ten percent commission for her ten dollar a week pay at Pete's Grotto.

A couple of local brawls against a rival gang, failure to initially join the Navy, and a warehouse heist gone wrong that leaves Officer Rourke wounded, all contribute to Chuck finally seeing the light and realizing that the street life would only lead to a dead end of his own. The picture successfully closes on Chuck's successful enlistment in the Navy with his family seeing him off to make his way in the world, surprising Nora with a kiss that she wasn't expecting. Much like the Warner Brothers pictures of the era, the story sought a way for its principal character to rise above his surroundings and find a way to become a valuable member of society.
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