This is an adaptation of the classic novel
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by
Mark Twain and is a follow-up to
Tom Sawyer (1930). Omitting the entire issue of whether or not Huck ought to turn the slave Jim back in after Jim escapes his owners, it concentrated mostly on the comedy in the novel, and turned Jim into the typical comic "darkie" stereotype of that era. The film was made as a follow-up to Paramount's
Tom Sawyer, which had been released a year earlier with substantially the same cast and became the top-grossing film of 1930. However, as happened with
Tom Sawyer, the 1931
Huckleberry Finn was superseded only eight years later by
MGM's far more faithful
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, starring
Mickey Rooney as Huck,
Rex Ingram as Jim,
Walter Connolly as the King, and
William Frawley as the Duke. An earlier version of the screenplay included a substantially more detailed set-up of Huck's rocky relationship with Miss Watson, a lengthy comic scene in which Tom insists on engineering a grand escape for Huck from Pap's shack, and more tender moments between Huck and Mary Jane. ==Reception==