Back to Nature (1936) - Turner Classic Movies

Back to Nature


1h 5m 1936

Film Details

Also Known As
See America First, The Jones Family in Back to Nature, Vacation on Wheels
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Sep 18, 1936
Premiere Information
Brooklyn opening: week of 28 Aug 1936
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Lake Mary, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Katharine Kavanaugh.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 5m
Film Length
5,160ft (6 reels)

Synopsis

When druggist John Jones plans to give the opening address at the Neighborhood Druggists' Association convention held on the 4th of July at Crystal Lake, his family of three sons, two daughters, wife and mother, insists that they be allowed to come along and convinces him to buy a trailer for the outing. After various mishaps occur on the first day of travel, the Jones family stops for the night to set up camp. John instructs his skeptical sons, Jack and Roger, on the proper way to build a fire, but succeeds only in filling the trailer with smoke. His teen-aged daughter Bonnie climbs a tree to escape a playful bearcub, of whom she is terrified, and she is greatly relieved when a stranger, Tom Williams, pulls the cub away. Williams, who tells the family that he was left behind by his train, fixes the stove in the trailer and successfully intercedes when a deputy sheriff threatens to fine John for building a fire in a restricted area. At Crystal Lake, Williams courts Bonnie, and Jack falls for a vacationing girl named Mabel, who has a penchant for fast boats and peppy music, while John prepares his speech and his bookish adolescent daughter Lucy attempts to write a novel. After Jack and Mabel stave a rented motorboat, the owner, Mr. Sweeney, allows Jack to spade a large plot of land to pay for the repairs. Jack tricks Roger, an extremely entrepreneurly-minded adolescent, into digging the plot to find Indian arrowheads to sell. Roger, displeased, sneaks up on Jack kissing Mabel and takes their picture. When he threatens to show the photo to the fellows back home, Jack is forced to agree to Roger's price for the negative. Meanwhile, a Department of Justice official comes looking for Williams, really a fugitive from the Illinois State Penitentiary named Silky Walker. After Williams tricks the unsuspecting Bonnie into leaving with him in the family car, Roger finds a typed farewell note. John, with Jack and Roger, borrows Mr. Sweeney's car, which he learns too late has no brakes, and chases Williams and Bonnie. After Bonnie threatens to jump and John, unwittingly, does not let Williams get around him, Williams stops the car and concedes defeat. The family learns that the farewell note was from Lucy's romantic manuscript, and on the trip home, after John points out that they should have nothing more to do with strangers, he nevertheless stops to pick up a lone boy hitchhiking, whose large family, hiding behind bushes, then pile into the trailer.

Film Details

Also Known As
See America First, The Jones Family in Back to Nature, Vacation on Wheels
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Sep 18, 1936
Premiere Information
Brooklyn opening: week of 28 Aug 1936
Production Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Lake Mary, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Katharine Kavanaugh.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 5m
Film Length
5,160ft (6 reels)

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Working titles for this film were See America First and Vacation on Wheels. The opening credits to the film read "Twentieth Century-Fox presents The Jones Family in Back to Nature." This was the third in the Jones Family series. Sources conflict concerning the release date: Fox trade advertising records list October 23, 1936 while Motion Picture Herald release charts compiled from studio information lists September 18, 1936. According to news items and publicity for the film, some scenes were shot at Lake Mary in the High Sierras in California. Hollywood Reporter estimated that about 90% of the film was shot in exteriors and noted, "It is geared to cash in on the current great vogue for auto trailers." For additional information on the series consult the Series Index and for Every Saturday Night.