The Little Princess

The Little Princess(1939)

G
03/17/1939 (US)Family, Drama, Comedy1h 33m
6.7

"A great classic comes to life in glorious Technicolor!"

Overview

A little girl goes in search of her father who is reported missing by the military during the Second Boer War.

Walter Lang

Director

Ethel Hill

Screenplay

Walter Ferris

Screenplay

Where to Watch

Stream

Amazon Prime Video
fuboTV
MGM Plus
Philo
Pure Flix
FlixFling
TCM
Amazon Prime Video with Ads
Dove Amazon Channel
Great American Pure Flix Amazon Channel

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home
FlixFling

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home
FlixFling

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

The Little Princess (1939) HD  Trailer

The Little Princess (1939) HD Trailer

Trailer

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
7.0

Written on June 22, 2022

Young "Sara" (Shirley Temple) is the apple of her military father's eye. When he (Ian Hunter) is sent abroad to fight in the Boer war, she is left at a posh boarding school run by the pernickety "Miss Minchin" (Mary Nash). Initially, this all goes swimmingly until news reaches them that her father has been killed at the siege of Mafeking and she, now penniless, has to serve as a glorified scullery maid. Disbelieving of her father's fate, the young girl and her fellow skivvy "Becky" (Sybil Jason) have some fun escapades that make her some new friends amongst the war wounded (including a touching cameo from the shell-shocked Morton Lowry), severely test the patience of her reluctant new guardian and hopefully track down her father. Yes, it smacks a little of "Cinderella" with a little "Annie" thrown in too, but the star is on great form as she sails, nonchalantly, through the proceedings with a charming and engaging air. Maybe the romance between Richard Greene ("Geoffrey") and Anita Louise ("Rose") clutters it up a bit, but otherwise a strong cast support the youngster ably with a suitably curmudgeonly Miles Mander ("Lord Wickham"), a cheery Arthur Treacher and Cesar Romero as the old lord's kindly butler. It's fun to watch - we always know what's going to happen in the end, but so what - it's a harmless and enjoyable bit of colourful escapism made just before times got really grim for many.