The Little Ranger was the first
Our Gang entry to be produced at MGM. By 1936, Hal Roach, who had produced the series at his studio since 1922, had wanted to get out of the increasingly less profitable short subjects market and into feature films. While Roach successfully moved
Laurel and Hardy into features and began producing several other feature properties such as
Topper, the
Our Gang feature
General Spanky was a box office failure and MGM persuaded Roach to keep the series in production as a series of one-reel shorts. Roach constantly fought with MGM to get distribution for a larger number of feature film releases as the studio's short subject output was reduced to only the
Our Gang one-reelers. In early 1938,
United Artists offered Roach a more lucrative and flexible distribution deal, prompting him to end his deal with MGM. This was done by delivering a final Roach-MGM Laurel and Hardy feature,
Block-Heads, canceling two "All-Star" musical features Roach was contracted to produce for MGM, and selling the entire
Our Gang unit to MGM. The
Our Gang sale was done at MGM's insistence rather than canceling the still-popular and profitable series. The sale included rights to the name "Our Gang", contracts for the child actors and writers, and a provision that forbade Roach to produce any
Our Gang-like films or to reissue any
Our Gang film he had produced. Then-current
Our Gang director
Gordon Douglas was loaned out for several months to launch the series at MGM, who would hire
George Sidney as the permanent series director.
Hal Roach Studios veterans
Hal Law and former part-time director
Robert A. McGowan transferred to MGM to write the screenplays for the new
Our Gang shorts. McGowan was the nephew of ''Our Gang's
original director and producer Robert F. McGowan, and had directed several mediocre 1920s/early 1930s Our Gang'' shorts himself under the pseudonym "Anthony Mack". ==Production notes==