Next up on the list of movies that's been on my DVR and that is about to get another airing on TCM is The Boy With Green Hair. Its next airing is tomorrow, November 8, at 3:30 PM. With that in mind, I made the point as usual of watching it so that I could do the post here just in time for the airing.
The movie starts off at a police station, where a bald boy has been found, claiming to have a story nobody will believe, which is why the authorities have brought in a child psychologist, Dr. Evans (Robert Ryan in a small role) to try to get the kid named Peter (Dean Stockwell) to talk. Once again, as you might guess, this is going to lead to a flashback as to why the kid has no hair and why he's run away.
Peter is an orphan who has been shuttled around from one aunt and uncle to another; who knows how many of them he has. But for whatever reason, none of them were able to take care of him, so he wound up in the care of one last relative, Gramp (Pat O'Brian). Gramp -- if he even is the kid's real grandfather although that ultimately doesn't matter to the plot -- is a retired actor now living out his days in a small town. It's the years just following World War II, when people are afraid of the new atomic bomb. Peter, as an orphan, doesn't fit in in his new home, getting teased by the kids and nearly panicking when he overhears some of the adults talking about the threat of war.
Gramp tries to soothe Peter by telling him that there's a surprise awaiting Peter the next morning. Peter does get a surprise, but it's not what Gramp might have had planned. Peter takes a bath the next morning, and as he's drying off his hair, takes the towel off to discover -- he has green hair! Well, duh, how do you think the movie got its title. Needless to say, this is a shock for him, and the question of how his hair suddenly turned green is a reasonable one. So Gramp takes Peter to the doctor, who is unable to determine any reason from the medicine he knows why Peter's hair should have turned green. The adults are shocked, although one girl at least claims it's super.
That is, until word spreads around among the adults. Some of them think that perhaps he got it from the milk he drinks, which makes no sense because wouldn't other people have green hair too then? Perhaps it's a disease, but one that's contagious. So pretty soon, nobody wants to be around Peter for fear they too might wind up with the same green hair. Peter, as a result, runs away from Gramp and into the forest, where he comes upon a Brigadoon-like place. Except that this place is inhabited by children who are all war orphans like Peter. They tell him that he's been given the green hair so that perhaps people will pay attention to him as he tells them how bad war is.
Nope, not going to work. Frankly, now that Peter has a message he's insufferable as well as being a misfit, which leads him to make the difficult decision to shave off his hair in the fact that it will grow back in its original color. Of course, we knew this was going to happen or else how would have little Peter have been found the way he is at the beginning of the movie.
If there's a problem with The Boy With Green Hair, it's that the message is nothing if not unsubtle. We get the point already. Perhaps the reason for this is that it's based on a short story, in which case trying to draw it out to feature length might have caused the problems. It doesn't help that the characters aren't the most appealing. Robert Ryan has nothing to do, so any of the movie's problems aren't his fault. Dean Stockwell is being asked to play a kid who has good reason to be morose and run away, so it's not really his fault either. Pat O'Brien goes for the Barry Fitzgerald Irish shtick at times, which comes across here as mildly obnoxious. And of course most of the rest of the characters are being asked to be mean to this poor kid.
It's not so much that The Boy With Green Hair is a bad movie, however, as much as it is material that it can be a bit hard to make palatable. So definitely watch and judge for yourself on this one.




