
| 5:00 p.m. | Young America Frank Borzage (U.S., 1932) |
The typical Frank Borzage film of the late 1920s and early 1930s was characterized by pictorial lyricism and a tender portrayal of young lovers who found poetry and beauty in the midst of poverty. In Young America, Borzage’s usual pair of lovers was replaced by two male school chums in their early teens, Art Simpson (Tommy Conlon) and Edward “Nutty” Beamish (Raymond Borzage, the director’s nephew). Most of the adult characters in the film consider Art “the worst boy in town,” although he seems just mischievous and impulsive—qualities outweighed by his fundamental decency and loyalty to Nutty. Borzage invests their friendship with chaste ardor and transformative power. The young actors easily outshine stars Spencer Tracy and Doris Kenyon as a married couple who take responsibility for Art after a scrape with the law.
—Charles Hopkins
• Written by William Conselman. Photographed by George Schneiderman. With Spencer Tracy, Doris Kenyon, Ralph Bellamy, Tommy Conlon. (71 mins, B&W, 35mm. Preservation funded by Twentieth Century Fox.)

