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IMDbPro

Youth Runs Wild

  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 7 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,8/10
480
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Jean Brooks, Bonita Granville, and Dickie Moore in Youth Runs Wild (1944)
The teens of a defense-plant town hop on the road to juvenile delinquency while their parents are busy with the war.
trailer wiedergeben1:22
1 Video
9 Fotos
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe teens of a defense-plant town hop on the road to juvenile delinquency while their parents are busy with the war.The teens of a defense-plant town hop on the road to juvenile delinquency while their parents are busy with the war.The teens of a defense-plant town hop on the road to juvenile delinquency while their parents are busy with the war.

  • Regie
    • Mark Robson
  • Drehbuch
    • John Fante
    • Ardel Wray
    • Herbert Kline
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Bonita Granville
    • Kent Smith
    • Jean Brooks
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    4,8/10
    480
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Mark Robson
    • Drehbuch
      • John Fante
      • Ardel Wray
      • Herbert Kline
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Bonita Granville
      • Kent Smith
      • Jean Brooks
    • 20Benutzerrezensionen
    • 7Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:22
    Official Trailer

    Fotos8

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung53

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    Bonita Granville
    Bonita Granville
    • Toddy Jones
    Kent Smith
    Kent Smith
    • Danny Coates
    Jean Brooks
    Jean Brooks
    • Mary Coates
    Glen Vernon
    Glen Vernon
    • Frankie Hauser
    • (as Glenn Vernon)
    Vanessa Brown
    Vanessa Brown
    • Sarah Taylor
    • (as Tessa Brind)
    Ben Bard
    Ben Bard
    • Mr. Taylor
    Mary Servoss
    Mary Servoss
    • Cora Hauser
    Arthur Shields
    Arthur Shields
    • Mr. Dunlop
    Lawrence Tierney
    Lawrence Tierney
    • Larry Duncan
    Dickie Moore
    Dickie Moore
    • Georgie Dunlop
    Johnny Walsh
    • Herb Vigero
    Rod Rogers
    Rod Rogers
    • Rocky
    • (as Rod Rodgers)
    Elizabeth Russell
    Elizabeth Russell
    • Mabel Taylor
    Joan Barclay
    Joan Barclay
    • Girl with Blanche
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Harold Barnitz
    • Stevie Coates
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Joan Blair
    • Mrs. Loring
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Policeman in Opening Montage
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Tom Burton
    • Corporal Jim Hayes
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Mark Robson
    • Drehbuch
      • John Fante
      • Ardel Wray
      • Herbert Kline
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen20

    4,8480
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    7mrsastor

    Excellent film from a usually weak genre

    Youth Runs Wild is an unusually good film for this genre, and given it's short running time and engaging story-telling, I recommend it.

    Most Hollywood films of the war era make every effort to depict American family life on the home-front as unrealistically perfect. Those filmmakers who strayed from this prerequisite story often found their efforts on the cutting room floor. Conversely, Youth Runs Wild makes an honest and enjoyable effort to depict the more flawed reality and with a storyline that is not too marred by the passage of time. Our story here deals with what at the time was a relatively new problem in America; parents called away from their household and family obligations to support the war effort and leaving adolescent and even younger children with insufficient supervision. The resulting consequences could just as easily serve as a warning to the parents of today called away from their obligations far too frequently in the less justifiable quest to obtain material possessions.

    For what is essentially an exploitive low-budget second-feature, Youth Runs Wild must be credited for its excellent casting. Both A-Listers and unknowns impart depth and warmth to their characters, and the largest contributing factor to the film's impressive honesty is that none of these people are purely good or purely evil.

    I think the most touching and heartbreaking event in our story occurs when Danny's parents force him to end his relationship with his girlfriend next door, Sarah. This is exactly the kind of situation that occurs in many a home in real life. Danny has become truant from school, begun to get into all kinds of trouble, and is developing a real surly attitude at home. Sarah's parents would not be considered a good influence by anyone, Danny's parents naturally presume the apple does not fall far from the tree and blame Sarah for Danny's delinquency and forbid him to see her anymore. While entirely well intentioned, it is the worst thing that happens to him in the whole film, they have removed the most positive influence from Danny's life and nothing good comes of it.

    The character of Sarah is well played by an unknown Vanessa Brown. This type of character was often given to Cathy O'Donnell, who would never have been able to give Sarah the underlying level of pathos that Ms. Brown does. Once Danny is removed from her life, Sarah attaches herself to the local bad girl, Toddy – played by Bonita Granville who is always wonderful in this type of role. Toddy leads her into a sordid nightlife, badly sanitized to meet 1940's standards of acceptability, but I think even contemporary audiences knew the life Toddy led her to was not being a simple "hostess", but a shill for a clip joint and probably eventually prostitution. Toddy does, after all, live rather well for an essentially orphaned girl in small town middle America.

    It might not stand up to repeated viewings for some, and as others have pointed out, Turner Classic Movies' print of Youth Runs Wild is rather beat-up looking; but I would describe this as unusually good work for this particular genre and certainly worth investing an hour of your time. Honest and thought-provoking character film.
    4SnoopyStyle

    flawed wartime film

    The youth are running wild while the adults are busy fighting the war. There are some youth and they're mildly wild. Mostly they're being led astray. This seems to be a sincere effort to direct kids towards more orderly pursuits. During wartimes, this could backfire in lowering morale for the adults. They have more than enough to worry about without worrying about their kids. The kids won't like it either. As a wartime film, its usefulness is a bit dubious. As a cinematic film, this is strictly in the B-movie realm. The actors are too green. The material is too melodramatic. There is little daring and it feels old. This is a good opportunity to spoof although I don't know if anybody actually did that.
    3moonspinner55

    Dutiful "warning" film for teens from, all of people, Val Lewton!

    From producer Val Lewton comes this awkward, hardly bearable WWII mini-soap with teenagers at its center. Beginning with a rash of newspaper headlines exclaiming the downward spiral of the era's delinquent youth, Lewton and director Mark Robson focus on working-class teen sweethearts who live next door in a small town housing project: she's from a rowdy, low-class family yet is inexplicably wholesome, he's a straight arrow who gets into trouble with the law by trying to impress his girl. The unsympathetic nature of the girl's parents is very believable and well-portrayed, but the kids themselves and the other adults are poorly-cast and sketchily-written. There's some business at the beginning about an auto shop dealing in stolen goods, but it's as irrelevant as the salty chanteuse who gets the girl a job as a hostess. Reportedly a troubled production, with R.K.O. altering the finished product against Lewton's wishes (he considered at one point removing his name from the credits). It has to be seen to be believed! *1/2 from ****
    5kidboots

    Tierney destined for bigger things

    "Back where we come from people are kind and good and strangers are welcome" ... so says sappy Sarah at the beginning of this film that seems like a feature length edition of one of the "Why We Fight" series. To see "Produced by Val Lewton and Directed by Mark Robson" is hard to believe with the above speech and the underlying moralistic tone. The film also came right in the middle of Lewton's creative period.

    Mary returns home to wait for husband (Kent Smith) who has been injured and won the purple heart. She returns to a quiet home - her parents work shifts at a munitions factory and brother Frank is unsupervised and playing truant from school. His parents blame his behaviour on the new girl next door but his situation is not much different than Sarah's - both sets of parents are shift workers at munition plants.

    Frank is on the "road to ruin" - he doesn't want to stay at school - he wants to work to take Sarah to movies and to buy her things. Sappy Sarah would be in 7th heaven with a walk in the park.

    There was a much longer film in there I feel. A lot of deleted scenes - Dickie Moore, credited as "son who kills his father - scene deleted" his only scenes were in the back seat of a car.

    Lawrence Tierney started out as his usual hard self, within 15 minutes he was "giving those kids a break". Halfway through the film he was gone - only coming back in the last scenes. When he left so did the punch and grittiness.

    Kent Taylor and Elisabeth Russell were Lewton veterans. Russell, who played Sarah's mother always seemed to have so much more to give than her roles required.

    Worst Actress Award is won by Tessa Brind, who plays sappy Sarah. She is not believable for a minute and when she visits Bonita Granville in hospital (which is the most ludicrous part in the film) she can be seen reflected through this plastic shield with the biggest smile on her face - maybe Tierney had just cracked a joke!!!!

    Don't judge Lewton on this effort, please!!!
    2AlsExGal

    Get used to those bars Larry...

    ... as in being behind them. I would be referring to Lawrence Tierney the actor, here as Larry, the bad guy, before Tierney would have his big chance with "Dillinger" the following year and then ultimately blow that chance with all of his bad behavior off the set. But I digress.

    I could tell this was not an A or even B list film because TCM is airing a print that looks like it came from a public domain source - very fuzzy. And who knew that in 1944 VD did not just stand for Victory Day???

    While the adults are off working double shifts in wartime factories the kids are getting involved in delinquency. The spotlight is on Vanessa Brown's character, Sarah, and her boyfriend, Frankie. Frankie gets into stealing tires to make extra money. Sarah's folks are hardly Ward and June Cleaver. They drink and play cards when they are not working and seems like they would be indifferent parents even if they didn't have intense work schedules. They throw Sarah out at the first sign of any trouble she might be in, and she is reduced to working as one of the hostesses in a dive, which seems like it is shorthand for something a bit more adult. Up to her fall, she is bullied and manipulated by the older world weary Hot Toddy Jones (Bonita Granville). But then, strangely, Toddy morphs into a mentor to the girl.

    There are all kinds of unexplained things going on. When a couple of teens are spotted by a security guard stealing tires, he shoots at them! I knew rubber was valuable during the war, but really? One of the cars the teens are stealing tires from in the plant parking lot has a toddler locked inside. This is never explained or commented on. Did the harried factory worker forget about the kid, or is this all they can do for day care? And when a fight breaks out in the dive in which Sarah works and a young healthy person is thrown to the floor in the resulting scuffle, she winds up in the hospital in .... an oxygen tent? With a priest doing last rites? Things never got this bad during the frequent fist fights at the Long Branch saloon in Gunsmoke!

    Too goofily constructed to be a stirring social drama with a message, and with too much heavy stuff going on to be an effective kitschy romp, this film fails on every level. It was based on a piece in Look Magazine. Look didn't like the finished product to the point that they refused to promote the film in the magazine, or even to allow their name to be used in the film's credits. .Val Lewton later disavowed the final version of the film and attempted to have his name removed from it. It really had no love 77 years ago when it was released and lost money at the box office, and today I can agree with that assessment.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      RKO tested two versions of the film - the one completed by producer Val Lewton and one where several controversial and violent scenes were cut. The final film is the latter version, causing Lewton to disavow the film and tried to have his name removed from the credits.
    • Zitate

      Frank 'Frankie' Hauser: Boy, if my folks would only let me work. Then I could do all the things I want to do. I could take you dancing, the way you like to go, places you like to go to. You know, they need welders. They need 'em worse than soldiers.

      Sarah Taylor: But your mother wants you to go to school, Frankie.

      Frank 'Frankie' Hauser: Yeah. That's the trouble.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Shadows in the Dark: The Val Lewton Legacy (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Jingle Bells
      (1857)

      Written by James Pierpont

      Sung a cappella by an off-screen child in the day care center

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 28. Mai 1945 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Are These Our Children?
    • Drehorte
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 7 Min.(67 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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