During World War II, an American boy named Timothy Dennis is unwillingly sent to Eton College in the UK where he is frequently confused by the many differences between the two cultures.During World War II, an American boy named Timothy Dennis is unwillingly sent to Eton College in the UK where he is frequently confused by the many differences between the two cultures.During World War II, an American boy named Timothy Dennis is unwillingly sent to Eton College in the UK where he is frequently confused by the many differences between the two cultures.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Boy in Locker Room
- (uncredited)
- Eton Student
- (uncredited)
- Cabby
- (uncredited)
- Man on the Street
- (uncredited)
- Waiter at the Willow Club
- (uncredited)
- Student
- (uncredited)
- Coach
- (uncredited)
- Tour Guide
- (uncredited)
- Eton Student
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
friendly rival
Mickey Rooney is doing his usual Andy Hardy stuff and clashing with the Brits starting with Lord Fauntleroy. It's fine. It goes rather easy on the Brits with the real war raging outside. Edmund Gwenn makes a meal of fighting side by side with them. It is what it is.
Such a cute flick
Mickey Rooney's mother marries the English Ian Hunter, and right in the middle of his high school heyday on the football field, Mickey and his sister are yanked-no pun intended-out of their world and forced to live in England with their new stepfather. Mickey has to go to Eton, and he doesn't like it. He doesn't appreciate the strings Ian had to pull to get him enrolled, and he doesn't appreciate the amount of rules headmaster Edmund Gwenn insists he abide by. In America, Mickey was the top dog, but at Eton, he's an underling who has a curfew, shares a room, and has to do little errands for upperclassmen, no questions asked. If you recognize one of the upperclassmen with the distinctive accent, you'll see the very young face of Peter Lawford!
Six years earlier, Mickey Rooney and Freddie Bartholomew starred in The Devil Is a Sissy together. Freddie played the newbie who didn't fit in, and Mickey was older and wiser who befriended him. Now in A Yank at Eton, Mickey is the newbie who doesn't fit in, and an older, taller, lower-voiced Freddie plays a student who tries to help him adjust. It's really too bad that Freddie's career petered out, since when he grew up, there was nothing wrong with his talent.
As much as Freddie threatens to steal the show, as much as Mickey threatens to steal the show, and as much as Edmund Gwenn threatens to steal the show, it's little Raymond Severn who succeeds. You might not know his name, but you'll recognize those big eyes on him and his seven siblings who acted in movies in the 1940s. He's an absolute doll. He idolizes Mickey Rooney, standing by him when no one else does, and his positive attitude just can't be doused. He gets bossed around by the upperclassmen and teased, and he takes it all with a smile. When he tries to catch on to American slang, it's too cute for words.
The end gets a bit silly, but keep in mind when it was made. The overwhelming theme of the movie is camaraderie, and the Americans and the English needed to become fast friends to fight the Germans. Rent this cute movie. If you like classic boys' school stories and would prefer one on the lighter side, you'll love it.
"If you think I'm going to go to school with a bunch of Little Lord Fauntleroys, you've got another guess comin'!"
The Mick Goes Abroad
After the death of her husband, Marta Linden takes a trip to Europe and returns with a new husband in Ian Hunter to the distress of her children, Rooney and Juanita Quigley. She says they're moving to England and Rooney doesn't like the idea because he wants to play football for Notre Dame.
Hunter gets the Mick into his old alma mater Eton and Rooney takes to it much like his character of Whitey Marsh took to Boystown. But the Mick's got a heart of gold which soon comes out. If you have seen Boys Town and remember the plot situations that's roughly what happens here.
There were some criticisms of A Yank At Eton one of which was the mistake of showing folks using left hand drive in cars instead of right hand which is what they have in the UK. Most of the time the negative was just reversed like they did for Gary Cooper to show a left handed batting Lou Gehrig in Pride Of The Yankees. In crowd scenes that couldn't be helped and unlike A Yank At Oxford, this film was done on the MGM back lot.
However having Rooney as a track star was a bit much. Face it folks, Mickey's size and short legs would never have made him any kind of star in running. And here they have Mickey doing hurdles and doing it in street shoes. Track coaches around the world probably laughed their heads off.
Although this was a wartime film with the obligatory reminder to buy bonds at the end of the film, there's not a mention of war or impending war in the film. Just a reminder of how Eton trains some of the future leaders in Great Britain who have never let the country down in peril. They might well have quoted the Duke of Wellington's aphorism of how the Battle Of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton.
It's not Boystown, but A Yank At Eton is an entertaining film if one can overlook some flaws. They should have had Mickey stick to football, he would have been interesting playing rugby in the climax.
Good Rooney Film
Did you know
- TriviaEarly in the movie, Little Lord Fauntleroy is mentioned. Both Mickey Rooney and Freddie Bartholomew had starred in the 1936 movie version (Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936)) of the Frances Hodgson Burnett novel.
- GoofsWhen Timothy meets Flossie while running errands, the cars are driving on the right side of the street. Cars drive on the left in England.
- Quotes
Flossie Sampson: [Overly dramatic] When you've crossed as many times as I have you realize how unimportant a shipboard romance really is. It's just one of those ephemeral things.
Timothy Dennis: Well, it's all in how you look at it. To me it's not one of those ... one of those whatchamacallit things.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Family Ties Vacation (1985)
- SoundtracksThe Eton Boating Song
(1863) (uncredited)
Music by Algernon Drummond
Lyrics by William Johnson
Sung by a chorus during the opening credits
Sung often by Eton students
Played often as background music
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Aventuras de un yanki
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 28m(88 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1








