Fly My Kite Explained

Fly My Kite
Director:Robert F. McGowan
Producer:Robert F. McGowan
Hal Roach
Starring:Our Gang
Margaret Mann
Jim Mason
Music:Leroy Shield
Marvin Hatley
Cinematography:Art Lloyd
Editing:Richard C. Currier
Distributor:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Runtime:20:51
Country:United States
Language:English

Fly My Kite is a 1931 Our Gang short comedy film directed by Robert F. McGowan.[1] It was the 107th Our Gang short to be released.[2]

Plot

Grandma, who recently sold her grocery store, is enjoying retirement with her beloved "grandchildren". She's actually a widow who outlived her only daughter, who was married but childless. Grandma lives in her son-in-law's house, and he's in charge of her money, which he has mostly spent. Meanwhile, she is having fun with the Gang — she's not any one child's grandma but everyone's grandma. Her son-in-law, however, wants to remarry, and he and his intended both want Grandma out of the house so they can move in.

He tells her to get her stuff and get out. He also tells her that she is broke and that he used up all the money from the store sale mere months ago. He says that she is old and that he cannot wait till she dies of old age because that could take forever. He even says he's arranged to have her sent to the Poor Farm.

Grandma confronts her son-in-law, and the Gang attacks him up on the spot. He manages to escape the children's rampages and then tells Grandma to leave immediately. He finds a letter informing her that she has savings bonds and to communicate with the bank right away. He goes to the bank and discovers they are indeed worth $100,000 (by today's standards, about $5 million). As Grandma is packing, she finds the bonds that she still thinks have no worth. Chubby is flying a kite with Dickie, and the kite does not stay up. Grandma tells him the tail needs more weight and uses the bonds to get the kite to fly.

Grandma's son-in-law returns to the house, purposely breaks her glasses (she thinks it is accidental) and pretends to read a letter that her bonds are worthless. She tells him that the bonds are on the tail of Chubby's kite. He runs outside and tries to take the kite away from Chubby. Grandma then reads the letter (magnified through a goldfish bowl) and learns the truth. She sends the Gang out to help Chubby keep her son-in-law from getting the kite. In the scuffle Dan lets go of the kite string and it gets picked up by Pete who, thinking they're playing, runs away from them with it. The Gang runs out and beats Grandma's son-in-law to a pulp (Including dragging him over a board studded with nails). They bust his watch (tit-for-tat for him breaking Grandma's glasses). After breaking free he chases Pete trying to get the kite away but in the chase the string breaks, blowing the kite away. Everyone gives chase but due to Dan being an adult is able to outrun everyone and finds it first, trapped on a power pole.

Climbing up the pole Dan is about to get the kite. Sending the smaller kids to find some saws, Farina leads the kids into attacking him from below with rocks, mud and sending electric shocks via a power control to stop him. Using saws, the kids manage to cut through the pole and together push the pole over causing Dan to crash to the ground in a pool of water. Grandma arrives with the police to find the kids have Dan trapped with Mary Ann having retrieved the bonds saving Grandmas retirement.

Cast

The Gang

Additional cast

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New York Times: Fly My Kite . https://web.archive.org/web/20110520171220/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/225656/Fly-My-Kite/overview . dead . May 20, 2011 . Movies & TV Dept. . . . Hal Erickson . Hal Erickson (author) . 2011 . September 20, 2008.
  2. Book: Maltin . Leonard . Bann . Richard W. . Our Gang: The Life and Times of the Little Rascals . 1977 . Crown Publishers . 130-131 . 3 March 2024.