The Littlest Diplomat

1937
5.4| 0h19m| G| en| More Info
Released: 06 September 1937 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Young Sybil visits her grandfather, a British Colonel stationed at a garrison in India, and she helps negotiate a diplomatic truce between him and the local natives.

Genre

Comedy, Family

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Director

Bobby Connolly

Production Companies

Warner Bros. Pictures

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The Littlest Diplomat Audience Reviews

Lawbolisted Powerful
Arianna Moses Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
Derrick Gibbons An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
Roxie The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . if Hillary only thinks of dispatching her to Pakistan in 1993 to charm and disarm Osama Bin Laden and his Taliban buddy Mullah Mohammad Omar. Some interpreters of Warner Bros.' prescriptive prophecies for America's Future have argued that THE LITTLEST DIPLOMAT is either urging JFK to send Carolyn to nip the arranged meeting of Osama's parents in the bud, or telling Jimmy Carter to dispatch Amy as a means of making the Afghanistan-bound Russian tanks retreat in 1979 (since she'd already been so successful with the Soviets in the area of nuclear proliferation by that juncture in time), but 1)this is Real Life, folks, not an episode of TV's TIME TUNNEL, and 2)"Sybil's" bugling scene is a dead giveaway that Warner is trying to tap Chelsea to save Our Twin Towers, since it's a well-known fact that the Clintons' heiress would have more musical talent in her little finger than the young Carolyn Kennedy and Amy Carter combined. Plus there's the fact that Sybil's guardian--Grandpa Colonel--says "My word is law," which sounds much more like a Slick Willie Proclamation than a chance remark from Jack or Jimmy. Unfortunately, America ignored Warner's advice about how to combat Radical Islamic Terrorists, and now it's too late. (Besides, no one can picture a fashion show-bound Iwanna Trump being on one of the 9-11 jets and telling her hijackers--to paraphrase Sybil--"I'm an American, and no subject of The Donald need ever be afraid!")
Neil Doyle SYBIL JASON was a very capable child actress who by this time was being promoted by Warner Bros. as their own Shirley Temple. A vehicle like this (a full-length version) had already served as the type of story you'd expect to find Temple starring in.Had the studio found better properties for Jason, the idea to promote her as another Temple might have worked.It's a Wee Willie Winkie sort of thing with Sybil visiting her grandfather at a garrison where the gruff man is not very popular with the regiment. In the course of twenty minutes, she melts his heart and forges diplomacy between him and his sworn enemy.The sets look like leftovers from "The Charge of the Light Brigade" except that they're in Technicolor for this one. Sybil is charming but a bit mechanical in her delivery of the hokey lines.The predictable plot has her escaping from the fort when her grandfather is too harsh with her and kidnapped by an Indian tribe. Their leaders has a heart to heart talk with her that convinces him to return her safely to the fort.All that's missing is a smiling close-up of Sybil, a la Temple--everything else is a cookie cutter mini-version of a Temple vehicle.
boblipton Released the same year as John Ford's WEE WILLIE WINKIE, in which Shirley Temple saves the British Raj, this Vitaphone short starring Sybil Jason is played much more for comedy, with a musical interlude or two. Miss Jason is rather stagy in her line readings and seems far more forcedly cute than Miss Temple's ebullient demeanor.The real star of this short is, neither Sybil Jason, nor Lumsdale Hare, but the beautiful Technicolor photography, courtesy of Ray Rennahan. He was a Technicolor specialist whose credits include the color sequences of the silent BEN HUR, two Oscars and two terms as president of the American Society of Cinematographers. This movie is more notable as a treat for lovers of the Technicolor process than its story or acting.
XweAponX I saw the wonderful little girl Sybil Jason in another short "Changing of the Guard," the first film directed by Bobby Connolly, and was impressed. There seems to have been a connection between Conolly and Jason as she was the subject of many of Conolly's Shorts. The last film by Jason was 1940's "The Blue Bird" with Shirley Temple and her scenes were probably edited and deleted because there was a high potential for Jason to Upstage Temple- This is not to say that the two child stars did not get along, but the "Grups" possibly got involved and it all became about personalities, and not what was best for the film- To find out why Sybil Jason did not act in any more Features can be looked into by reading her Autobiography.This Short follows the basic format set up in 1936's 'Changing of the Guard' which director Bobby Conolly, (of 1938's 'Fools for Scandal') also directed- That film had more tightly directed musical numbers in it... This film has a few, but it actually has a good storyline, good for contemporary children to watch and get something out of.This short is not nostalgia-driven like "Changing of the Guard" but is a little bit of everything... And if this film is watched carefully, it can be seen that a very delicate issue is lightly touched on- Watch this short to see about this. With the musical and story elements in place, this short is a very nice little package- And as it is in colour, this short could be shown in the big theatres today, and it's message would not be lost.It seems that the team of writer Sid Herzig/director Bobby Conolly produced these shorts- Most of them highlighting Sybil Jason. Bobby Connolly was a good director, and it is too bad he was taken from us before his time.

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