The film was made before Jeffries' third film as director, The Amazing Mr Blunden (1972), but released afterwards.[3]
Plot
Roger Baxter, a young American boy with a speech impediment, goes to live in London with his mother after his parents' divorce. He struggles to pronounce the letter R, and at school he becomes close to his speech therapist. He makes friends with his upstairs neighbour Chris Bentley whom he meets in the lift, and her French husband, Roger Tunnell. He also meets Nemo, a girl who lives across the street from his flat. His parents are extremely self-centred and neglectful, and he feels isolated in a strange city. He eventually slides into an emotional breakdown.
The Boy Who Could Make Himself Disappear was published in 1968. One critic called it "unforgettable".[4]
In November 1971, it was announced the film would be called The Boy and it would be a co production between Anglo-EMI Films and Group W Films.[5]Hanna-Barbera also produced the film; it is one of the studio's live-action efforts, despite being primarily known as an animation studio.
Editor Teddy Darvas stated, "I think of the three films that Lionel has directed, "Baxter" is the minor masterpiece. It has an emotion which is quite out of this world. And when we finished the film, it turned out that Bernard Delfont couldn't bear films with children's illnesses in them. And so the film was shelved."
[8]
References
^"Baxter!". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 9 May 2024.