Baxter!

1973 "If you believe in love, then you'll love Baxter!"
Baxter!
7| 1h44m| en| More Info
Released: 04 March 1973 Released
Producted By: Hanna-Barbera Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A young boy struggles to overcome his speech problem and strained relationship with his parents.

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tightjeansdude Baxter is Roger Baxter, played by Scott Jacoby who later starred in cult classics such as "Bad Ronald" & "The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane". Roger lives with his mother in London. They're American, but his self-absorbed socialite mother likes living in London because "it's a beautiful and civilized city". Mrs. Baxter doesn't quite understand her son and is cold and insensitive to his needs. Roger seems to get along very well with older people- a neighbor girl named 'Nemo', a couple living nearby (a French chef & his Swedish model girlfriend) and Roger's speech therapist, Roberta (Patricia Neal). Roger struggles with his inability to pronounce his "R"'s but his speech therapist gives him the love and nurturing that he never had from his own mother. Roger does have a couple emotional breakdowns in the film, and upon returning home from a hospital following one such breakdown, he learns that his neighbor friend Chris, (played by Britt Ekland) has died of pneumonia. This news puts Roger into a near nervous breakdown. Thankfully, his speech therapist is with him and explains to his mother that Roger must return back to the hospital immediately, which climaxes into a physical confrontation between the therapist and his mother. I won't tell what happens in the final scene, but it is indeed very moving and very beautiful.
ladymidath I saw Baxter, (not to be confused with the movie about a Pittbull) years ago. It's a movie I have never forgotten. This movie is one of the most heart wrenching and yet beautiful films I have ever seen. Sadly I have never been able to find a copy of it and for some strange reason, this masterpiece has never been released on VHS or DVD. A young teenager with a speech impediment who is emotionally neglected by his selfish parents moves from the States to England with his self obsessed mother. He also has a caring speech therapist who actually seems to understand his isolation. He befriends a couple who become a surrogate big brother and big sister to him.He also befriends a young girl as well but through a series of events, he ends up having a traumatic breakdown ending in one of the most tear inducing scenes ever filmed. This movie is a tear jerker, but it is not manipulative, but honest in it's portrayal of a lonely unhappy boy. Watch it if you can find it, and I truly hope you can find it.
yiefthy "Dear dad, I wish this journey would go on forever" writes young Roger Baxter to his ever-absent father, on the flight from America to England and right away tears up the letter and flushes it down the toilet. That's how this exquisite film about troubled adolescence, indifferent parents and the painful realization of commitment and loss begins. And it's no easy ride. Steering clear of the clichés that usually burden these movies, it offers us a clear and passionate view of the mind of this teenager in the way good British films do, in a simple no-nonsense way. (Kudos to actor-turned-director Lionel Jeffries for his efficient "invisible" direction).A little about the story: Roger Baxter comes to London with his divorced mother. They are rich and he's enrolled in a very exclusive school, which he hates. His mother is a self-absorbed artistic socialite who has little time for her son. His father is still in the States and he's as absent to his son as he is to us viewers (we hardly ever see him). Also Roger has a speaking disability (he cannot pronounce "r") which further separates him from the rest of the "normal" people. The sun shines for our hero through a handful of encounters: to a young couple (a French chef and a Swedish model) who become surrogate older siblings, a young girl who's as close to a romantic interest that Roger comes to but not quite and the Speech therapist who's a much stronger mother figure than his own mother. Through a series of events Roger has his psyche shattered, but the end of this film, a great scene between Scott Jacobi and Jean-Pierre Cassell, is both optimistic and touching.The acting is uniformly very good, but special mention must go to two actors who really carry the film. Scott Jacobi as Roger Baxter gives the performance of his career, while Patricia Neal as the speech therapist conveys both the quiet authority as well as the human warmth needed in the part (Favourite scene: Roger is on the verge of a nervous breakdown and his mother, not understanding what is happening with her son, slaps him. Patricia Neal grabs her wrist and in a very quiet voice says: "I am not a violent person and I will probably hate myself in the morning, but if you as so much as touch this boy I will break every bone in your body").When the movie came out in the early seventies, a British film critic called it "a small masterpiece". Do find out for yourselves that indeed it is so.
chet19 In the early 70s, I never heard of a kid actor named Scott Jacoby. Then one week I saw him in like 3 movies in a row airing in the middle of the night. Baxter! isn't as good as "Bad Ronald," but it held my interest even though I was just a kid, and it's still a great film today. Scott plays this kid Roger with a lisp and he has to get speech therapy. He kinda comes of age while going through this. Sounds kind simple, and it is, but it has some intense moments. Good stuff.