The Wonder Kid
The Wonder Kid | |
---|---|
Directed by | Karl Hartl |
Written by | Gene Markey |
Starring |
Bobby Henrey Elwyn Brook-Jones Muriel Aked Oskar Werner |
Music by | Willy Schmidt-Gentner |
Cinematography |
Günther Anders Robert Krasker |
Edited by | Reginald Beck |
Production company | |
Release dates |
|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £79,912 (UK)[1] |
The Wonder Kid is a 1952 British film starring Bobby Henrey, in his second and last film since "The Fallen Idol" .
Plot
Sebastian Giro is a ten-year-old French boy and child musical prodigy found in an orphanage by Mr Gorik (Elwyn Brook-Jones) who exploits the youngster’s talent as a classical pianist and turns him into an international celebrity. He even tells everyone that the boy is only seven years old to make the boy wonder’s talent seem all the more remarkable.
But Gorik is also a crook who embezzles the takings so that he has almost all the money and Sebastian gets hardly any. Coupled with that, Gorik won’t allow Sebastian to enjoy the simple pleasures of being a little boy, like playing with other boys or even reading comic books, because, when Sebastian isn’t performing, Gorik isn’t making any money out of him. He works the over tired boy like a slave who must continually practice on the piano.
Sebastian’s elderly English governess, Miss Frisbie (Muriel Aked) is very concerned about the boy and confronts Gorik about his crooked activities. But he dismisses her from her post. Miss Frisbie then pays a gang of crooks to "kidnap" Sebastian and take him to stay in a remote lodge in the Austrian Tyrol, where the boy has never been so free and happy and Gorik won’t get him back until he’s paid over a huge ransom which is, in effect, all the money he has stolen from the boy.[2]
Production
It was filmed on location in Austria and at Isleworth Studios in England in late 1949 and early 1950, but not released until 1952.
References
- ↑ Vincent Porter, 'The Robert Clark Account', Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, Vol 20 No 4, 2000 p498
- ↑ The Wonder Kid at BFI