Isank into Randy Carter's comfy couch, excited to see the Hollywood veteran's magnum opus.

Around the first floor of his Glendale home were framed photos and posters of films the 77-year-old had worked on during his career. "Apocalypse Now." "The Godfather II." "The Conversation."

What we were about to watch was nowhere near the caliber of those classics — and Carter didn't care.

Footage of a school bus driving through dusty farmland began to play. The title of the nine-minute sizzle reel Carter produced in 1991 soon flashed: "Boy Wonders."

The plot: White teenage boys in the 1960s gave up a summer of surfing to heed the federal government's call. Their assignment: Pick crops in the California desert, replacing Mexican farmworkers.

"That's the stupidest, dumbest, most harebrained sche

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