Genre: | Drama |
Director: | Donald Wrye |
Starring: | Peter Boyle Scott Jacoby |
Music: | Fred Karlin |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Producer: | Robert W. Christiansen Rick Rosenberg |
Cinematography: | Gene Polito |
Editor: | Walter Thompson |
Runtime: | 75 min. |
Company: | Tomorrow Entertainment |
Network: | ABC |
The Man Who Could Talk to Kids is a 1973 American made-for-television drama film directed by Donald Wrye. It was originally broadcast on ABC on October 17, 1973.[1]
This is the story of one boy isolated in his world, who allows one man to penetrate it, in order to bring the family back together.
The story was a Docu-drama based on Harold Mondschein's work with troubled kids (Learning, Behavior and Emotional issues.) The young man portrayed in the film was a composite of several children he had previously worked with. It was Peter Boyle's first adventure into trying a different kind of "softer" character, one of Donald Wrye's first forays into directing and one of ABC's first made for television movies, which started a "trend." Douglas Day Stewart began his writing career close to this time and this was one of Tomorrow Entertainments' first production efforts.