Lord Jeff (1938) Poster

(1938)

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7/10
Training Britain's Merchant Marine
bkoganbing14 June 2011
Although Lord Jeff came out the same year as Boys Town and is essentially the same story, what this film lacks is the star quality presence of Spencer Tracy. It also could be compared to Captains Courageous where Mickey Rooney and Freddie Bartholomew play the same characters.

Charles Coburn is the father figure here, head of a Thomas John Barnardo school which populate the British Isles and which were set up by the late Irish philanthropist, (he was Irish despite that name, just like Eamon DeValera).

The title comes from Bartholomew's character whom when we first meet is a spoiled kid living in luxury. However he's an orphan kid whom a pair of crooks, George Zucco and Gale Sondergaard, use as a shill for their thieving rackets. Scotland Yard arrests and exposes Bartholomew, but the adults get away.

The judge gives Bartholomew a break sending him to Barnardo school, one in this case that is a quasi-military institute that trains men for the Navy and Merchant Marine. In a country like Britain which depends on the sea and has the great naval tradition this is an important task the school undertakes.

Bartholomew is as tough a nut to crack as he was aboard Lionel Barrymore's fishing boat in Captains Courageous and as Mickey Rooney was in Boys Town. But Rooney's in this film as well and he's the mentor kid who whips Bartholomew in line.

If you've seen Boys Town you know the bad influences come back and they have to be dealt with. I'll save that for your viewing pleasure.

Herbert Mundin who usually played funny little milquetoast characters is the old sea salt who teaches seamanship and discipline to the kids. This was an interesting change of parts for him and he acquits himself admirably in a different persona. You'll also see a very young Peter Lawford as one of the kids, this was one of his earliest films.

The finale takes place aboard the new Cunard liner the Queen Mary. All in all Lord Jeff is a fine family film from MGM.
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8/10
Bartholomew outshines Rooney
kidboots17 December 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This was the last time Freddie Bartholomew was top billed and in my opinion outshone the very annoying Irish accented Mickey Rooney.

Called "The Boy From Barnardos" in England it is the story of Jeffrey Braemer (Freddie Bartholomew) who as "Lord Jeff" is one of a trio of upper crust jewel thieves. He is masquerading as a young Lord, who, along with his dowdy "governess" (a disguised Gale Sondergaard) is making life very unpleasant for staff at a grand hotel with his demands and behaviour. After their capture, he is sent to the naval division of Dr. Barnardos to learn a trade. He isn't liked any more by the boys than he was by the hotel staff - they think him a "swell". He does make one friend, the very amiable Albert (Terry Kilburn is excellent in this role).

Terence McMulvaney (Mickey Rooney) is the head boy, a likable Irish lad, and is asked to take Jeff under his wing. (A young Peter Lawford also plays one of the new boys). Terence has been chosen to be an apprentice on the "Queen Mary" - a position of great trust. With no letters from his "friends" Jeff decides to run away. He gets the opportunity at a Liberty party that the boys are invited to. Terence sets out to bring him back and while returning to the dormitory, is seen and reported. He is punished by the removal of his stripes so he cannot go to his apprenticeship on the "Queen Mary". The boys realise what has happened and send Jeff to "Coventry".

The annual boat race is due and "Crusty" Jelks (Herbert Mundin), who has a soft spot for Jeff, makes him Cox - his crew is not happy, even though they win!!!

On yet another outing he renews his acquaintance with his initial companions (Sondergaard and George Zucco). She wants him to come back to them and resume his old ways, but Jeffrey now realizes his true loyalty lies with Barnardos and is also determined to join the "Queen Mary". They, in their turn, hide a dazzling necklace in his coat and Jeff is caught and may be sent to reform school. It all turns out okay when the couple are caught trying to flee the country and both Jeff and Terry get berths on the "Queen Mary".

It is a very enjoyable film that is not too preachy. Charles Coburn is very good as Captain Briggs.

Highly Recommended.
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8/10
Brittania rules the waves
nickenchuggets16 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
For some reason, every movie I've seen so far with acclaimed child actor Freddie Bartholomew has also included Mickey Rooney. The last time I saw them together, the plot of the film had them be friends. Here, Rooney is part of an institution that has a strong dislike of Freddie, but through determination (as well as making some serious mistakes), Freddie is able to eventually be accepted among them. Lord Jeff begins with (predictably enough) Bartholomew playing an arrogant, high class Brit who is also an orphan. Behind closed doors, Geoffrey Braemer is secretly the assistant of two crooks named Jim and Doris (George Zucco and Gale Sondergaard respectively). While the three of them at are a jewelry store, Geoffrey pretends to pass out next to a display case, allowing Jim to snatch an extremely valuable necklace known throughout the whole UK. Jim makes off with the necklace, but Geoffrey's ruse as an aristocrat is soon detected and he's sent to a merchant marine school to get disciplined. He's told that if he continues to misbehave he'll be sent to a reformatory. Upon arriving, Geoffrey meets Albert Baker, a short kid who looks up to him (no pun intended) as well as Terry O'Mulvaney (Mickey Rooney). Terry is, for lack of a better term, a teacher's pet. He's tasked with looking after Geoffrey and the other novices, but Geoffrey doesn't like being coddled and already displays much nautical knowledge when Terry questions him about things. He then attempts to bribe him, but Terry rats him out to the head of the school, Captain Briggs (Charles Coburn). Geoffrey refuses to adjust to his new environment, considering it beneath his intelligence. He gets into more trouble when the school attends a party, at which Doris is an entertainer. Geoffrey takes advantage of the excitement and runs away. Although Albert promised not to tell anyone where Geoffrey went, Terry finds out soon. After tracking him down, they fight and an exhausted Geoffrey is hauled back to the school. Terry brings him back to the dorms very early in the morning and climbs through a window, catching the attention of a guard. Briggs summons Terry, demanding to know why he was not in his bed until 5 o'clock in the morning. Terry decides to cover up Geoffrey's decision to attempt running away and keeps his mouth shut. Briggs punishes Terry for not cooperating by taking away his honor roll status, devastating him since only honor students get to take a journey on the Queen Mary; Britain's most modern and imposing cruise ship. Stripped of his prestige, Terry leaves Briggs' office. Meanwhile, the other kids refuse to have anything to do with Geoffrey since he simply doesn't want to admit he was wrong. Eventually, all the other kids ignoring him on purpose starts to wear on Geoffrey's mind, so he decides to turn himself in. He goes to talk with Briggs, saying that Terry being out of bed was his fault, not Terry's. Geoffrey knows attempting escape is a serious offence and could mean reform school, but he wants to see Terry get his ship voyage back. Briggs clears Terry's name, but doesn't tell anyone it was Geoffrey who defended him. As the date of the journey draws closer, Geoffrey is visited by Doris once again, visibly a changed person. He doesn't want to go back to being a degenerate and leaves Doris to her own life. Doris and Jim plan to get revenge on Geoffrey by planting the stolen necklace from earlier in his coat pocket. During a ceremony, Geoffrey, Terry, Albert and 2 other lucky boys are selected to be sailors on the Queen Mary, but Briggs finds the necklace in Geoffrey's coat soon after. Geoffrey is forced to explain himself, and he says he had no idea it was in there. Knowing he is being set up, he tells Briggs he is turning his back on his past criminal ways and is instead going to be loyal to the new friends he's made, as these people believe in him. The day of the voyage arrives, and the other 4 kids are on the Queen Mary ready to set sail. Geoffrey is being detained and not allowed to join them, but Terry spots Doris and Jim on the ship and lets people know they are criminals. Jim and Doris are arrested, the necklace is returned to its rightful place, and Geoffrey (now proven innocent) is allowed to join his friends on the ocean. Having never even heard of this film before yesterday, I wouldn't have been surprised if it was barely average, but Lord Jeff was quite a good movie. Rooney was a great actor no matter what thing he was starring in, and even as a teenager, he demonstrates this. If you didn't know any better, you'd get the impression the Irish accent he has throughout this whole film is the actual way he talks. The rivalry (and eventual friendship) between him and Freddie is the high point of the plot. Just to be clear, this movie isn't amazing, but for something with only a handful of reviews on here, I'd say it turned out better than I was expecting. In more ways than one, Lord Jeff shows how great actors can make even plain movies an indelible experience.
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6/10
Orphans in the Dorm
wes-connors8 September 2007
Freddie Bartholomew stars as a seemingly upper crust "Lord" (Jeff Braemer) who is really an orphaned thief; suspected in an emerald necklace heist, he is sent to a navel academy and meets idealized Irish orphan Mickey Rooney (as Terry O'Mulvaney). Boy-among-the-young-men Terry Kilburn (as Albert Baker) keeps the "cute quotient" high.

Their roles are tailor-made for Mr. Bartholomew's "British upper crust" and Mr. Rooney's "Irish working lad" personas. Bartholomew is perfect as the aristocratically-guised London thief, complaining about the "wretched" hotel service and fainting during opportune moments. Bussed to a a purgatory-type sailor school (not quite a hellish reform school), he immediately clashes with Rooney. The two "child stars" contrast well, and their difficult bonding becomes the film's main source of entertainment. Rooney is much more relaxed in "Lord Jeff" than other "orphaned lad" roles; here, he exudes natural likability. Kilburn's little Albert seems out of place among the older boys, but he performs as well, and gives Bartholomew's character some much-needed appeal. Other story structure, and editing, problems weaken the running time.

Irrelevant, probably, to the film "Lord Jeff" is the status of its two stars. Bartholomew was a very popular "boy star" and Rooney was much more popular as a "teen star"; and, they made several films together. This film catches the Bartholomew near the end of his career, and Rooney beginning his most successful years. With this in mind, don't miss their mid-film fistfight!

****** Lord Jeff (6/17/38) Sam Wood ~ Freddie Bartholomew, Mickey Rooney, Terry Kilburn, Charles Coburn
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7/10
Gale Sondergaard to the rescue!
JohnHowardReid23 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Director: SAM WOOD. Screenplay: James Kevin McGuinness. Original screen story: Bradford Ropes, Val Burton and Endre Bohem. Photography: John Seitz. Film editor: Frank E. Hull. Art directors: Cedric Gibbons and Uric McClery. Set decorator: Edwin B. Willis. Costumes: Dolly Tree. Music: Edward Ward. Uncredited script contributors: Frank Davis, Walter Ferris, Sam Wood. Script clerk: Carl Roup. Technical adviser: Edward J. Stacey. A Sam Wood Production. Sound recording: Douglas Shearer. Western Electric Sound System. Producer: Frank Davis. Dedicated to Dr Thomas John Barnardo.

Copyright 20 June 1938 by Loew's Inc. Presented by Merto-Goldwyn- Mayer. New York opening at the Capitol, 30 June 1938. U.S. release: 17 June 1938. Australian release: October 1938. 9 reels. 85 minutes. U.K. and Australian release title: The BOY FROM BARNARDO'S.

SYNOPSIS: Orphan boy turned jewel thief learns true sportsmanship at Dr Barnardo's marine training school.

NOTES: Academy Award, Mickey Rooney, best male juvenile of 1938.

COMMENT: One doesn't want to be too hard on this movie, though many viewers may well find its good intentions rather a pain. The plot, of course, is thoroughly predictable and doesn't live up to the promise of its lively opening sequences.

The characters, alas, are pretty conventional figures too — though enacted by a rather interesting cast including Mickey Rooney fairly successfully attempting an Irish accent and young Peter Lawford smiling in many backgrounds. Charles Coburn, Herbert Mundin, George Zucco and Matthew Boulton are always reliable players. And it's nice to spot Monty Woolley.

However, the film's stand-out performance is contributed by Gale Sondergaard, one of the finest actresses ever to grace the screen. Her fascinatingly clever portrayal alone makes Lord Jeff a must-see picture.

Wood's direction is competent, keeping the pace moving along briskly, and Seitz's lighting is atmospherically low-key. By "B" standards — the film was obviously designed as rip-off of Boys Town — production values are lavish, with that all-British background skilfully recreated in both interiors and exteriors.
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6/10
BOYS TOWN, British style
planktonrules9 September 2007
Freddie Bartholomew played a sophisticated thief who worked with two adult criminals who raised him after his parents' deaths. Because of his sick upbringing, Freddie had no conscience. Despite this, when he was captured by police, he was sent to a training school for orphans, not reform school. However, despite getting a break, Freddie is a jerk and can't help but antagonize his peers--that is until he finally sees the light and turns to the side of goodness and fair play (huzzah).

This film came out the same year as BOYS TOWN and I assume one directly led to the other--as they are essentially the same film with a few changes here and there. Plus, although Mickey Rooney played a different type character, he was in both films--though in LORD JEFF he played a supporting character and Freddie Bartholomew was the lead. Heck, they even had a character in LORD JEFF that was much like Pee Wee, though fortunately, the British version did not have to die to make Freddie see the light! While this is a competent enough film, I was greatly disappointed because Charles Coburn was one of the leading characters BUT he was amazingly conventional. None of his usual pompous but charming persona is present. Apart from that, though, the film is pure late 1930s MGM family fare and is worth a look. But if you've seen BOYS TOWN, then you certainly don't need to see this, as it's just a rehash and predictably formulaic.
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6/10
stardoms crossing
SnoopyStyle8 April 2024
Orphan Geoffrey Braemer (Freddie Bartholomew) pretends to be a young English Lord with his con artist accomplices. After getting caught, he is sent to a mercantile marine boys school run by Captain Briggs (Charles Coburn). Terry O'Mulvaney (Mickey Rooney) is the longtime honor boy.

Mickey Rooney's stardom is rising and would soon overtake Freddie Bartholomew's childstar status. The two actors should switch roles since they fit the other characters better. Freddie is much more the high society straight boy and Mickey is the low class brawler con-man. I can do without all the sailing talk. I don't know anything about any of that. As always, one gets a sense that Mickey holds more interior acting power while Freddie is good at his specific style. This is not the best example of a boys school movie, but it's always great to have these two kids working together.
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10/10
Mickey Rooney Steals The Show!
Ron Oliver7 July 2000
A young & talented thief, masquerading as the obnoxious LORD JEFF, is captured and sent to a naval school to rehabilitate. There he meets an Irish lad, whose decent behavior has a profound effect upon him.

Think CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS meets BOYS TOWN, and you have an idea of this good, but unremarkable, little picture. Freddie Bartholomew, coming to the end of his glory days as MGM's reigning child star, is hampered mightily by the fact that his character is so rotten, the audience has an overwhelming desire to loathe him for most of the film. Mickey Rooney, on the other hand, right on the cusp of his tremendous stardom, steals his every scene with his unique & infectious bravado. Notice that the boys get equal billing. That would not happen again. Rooney was the major star from here on out.

The rest of the cast all do a fine job, especially Charles Colburn, Herbert Mundin & Emma Dunn, all memorable as supervisors at the naval school. That's Monty Woolley, soon to be an important character actor, as a London jeweler. Gale Sondergaard (in good disguise) & George Zucco have small roles as the adult thieves, while Terry Kilburn (nicely effective) & Peter Lawford play two of the young fellows.

Movie mavens will recognize Rex Evans as the hotel doorman & Doris Lloyd as the hostess of a party the boys attend.
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8/10
Learning Life's Lessons
Maleejandra30 September 2007
As another reviewer concluded, this film is very much like Boys Town and even features Mickey Rooney. However, this time, the troubled teen is Freddie Bartholomew as Jeff Braemer. Jeff is involved with a group of jewel thieves, but after being caught, is sent to a orphan school to learn to be a merchant marine. Jeff's rich life has left him jaded and uncooperative, but schoolmates Terry O'Mulvaney (Rooney) and Albert Baker (Terry Kilburn) refuse to give up on him.

The excellent cast makes this film worth watching many times over. There are lessons learned and friends made, but none of those things would be effective if it weren't for believable and likable characters. The subject matter is appropriate for all ages too. Sit down and enjoy this one with the family.
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5/10
lord jeff
mossgrymk22 January 2021
Kind of a combination of two mediocre, sentimental films..."Captains Courageous" and "Boys Town"...which, not surprisingly, results in a third mediocre, sentimental film. Give it a C.
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10/10
Two Star Leads -- Everyone Shines
tr-8349520 June 2019
In "Lord Jeff" we have it all. A very talented Freddie Bartholomew and the quick learning Mickey Rooney. The script was gold, the boys endearing, and the men in charge were human. You never lose interest in a film so masterfully done as this. This is one of those movies everyone should see. It is a good representation of 30s movie making, and its endearing story ensures that it will resonate with generations to come. That being said, the film needs to be colorized so that modern generations will watch it. Young people won't watch black and white.
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5/10
Not the best boys' school movie
HotToastyRag24 November 2019
If you don't want to see Freddie Bartholomew as a bad guy, stay away from Lord Jeff. He plays a small-time grifter who gets sent to the merchant marines to reform his character. He's snobby and insulting, and has a bad attitude. I prefer him when he's sweeter, but I stuck with this movie for the supporting cast.

In the batch of boys arriving with Freddie to the merchant marine training school are Terry Kilburn and a very young Peter Lawford in his second movie! Terry has the cutest character in the movie, with a missing tooth (before it gets fixed, a Cockney accent, and a hopelessly optimistic and loyal personality. Mickey Rooney also takes on an accent-Irish-as he's the experienced student who helps show everyone the ropes. Charles Coburn is the no-nonsense head of the school, and Herbert Mundin is his second-in-command. Keep an eye out for Monty Woolley and Gale Sondergaard, but don't expect too much from anyone. No one's really given very much to do, and besides Terry, no one really succeeds in making the audience like him. You're better off with Boys Town or A Yank at Eton.
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