I wonder if they felt they needed a little uplift because "kids" (OK, teenagers) were the focus of the story. It's all well and good to leave poor Richard Barthelmess out on the road hustling from nowhere to nowhere (HEROES FOR SALE) or send audiences home with a musical punch in the face (GOLD DIGGERS OF 1933), but kids. . . .
Though I vaguely remember Andrew Bergman arguing in WE'RE IN THE MONEY that it had to do with the timing of WILD BOYS' release, later in 1933 when FDR was starting to be an inspirational force. But I haven't read that book in years.
