The Little Kidnappers (1990 film)

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The Little Kidnappers
GenreCrime
Drama
Written byCoralee Elliott Testar
Directed byDonald Shebib
StarringCharlton Heston
Patricia Gage
Bruce Greenwood
Leah Pinsent
Music byMark Snow
Country of originCanada
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producers
Glenn R. Jones
Producers
(co-producer)
CinematographyMiklós Lente
Editor
Running time92 minutes
Release
Picture formatColor
Audio formatMono
Original releaseAugust 17, 1990 (1990-08-17)

The Little Kidnappers is a 1990 Canadian/American television film[1] made by Testar Productions, Margellos-Resnick and Jones 21st Century for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Disney Channel. It tells the story of orphans Harry and Davy MacKenzie (Leo Wheatley and Charles Miller), who are sent to live with their stern grandfather, James MacKenzie (Charlton Heston).

Based on the short story "Scotch Settlement" by Neil Paterson (previously filmed in 1953), set in Nova Scotia in 1903, the film was shot in several locations throughout Nova Scotia with dockside scenes being filmed aboard the CSS Acadia at the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Halifax.[2]

Plot[]

Coralee Elliott Testar's version of the story revolves around letters written by James' son to his wife and children. Harry and Davy have brought them in a box James had carved for his son many years before. Through these letters, James begins to find healing from his grief over the death of his son at the hands of Dutch soldiers in the Second Boer War in South Africa, deliverance from the hatred in his heart for neighboring Dutch farmers, and acceptance of his daughter's love for the village doctor who is also of Dutch heritage.

The movie's title refers to the discovery and rescue by Harry and Davy of the neighbor's baby briefly left unattended on a beach and their decision to hide and care for it themselves rather than risk their grandfather's harsh and unmerciful reaction to it.

Awards[]

The 1990 film received broad international distribution and has been nominated for numerous awards, winning the prestigious .

References[]

  1. ^ "Innocence, Conflict in 'Little Kidnappers'". LA Times. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  2. ^ "CSS Acadia Filmography", Maritime Museum of the Atlantic

External links[]


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