Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuReform school girls try to make the best of a bad situation.Reform school girls try to make the best of a bad situation.Reform school girls try to make the best of a bad situation.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Melinda Casey
- Betsy Abel
- (as Linda Plowman)
Jean Inness
- Mrs. Nichols
- (as Jean Innes)
Ray Foster
- Cliff Munster
- (as Raymond Foster)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Moving story of a group in a home for wayward girls who find an illegal opportunity to be a family. A new girl, Betsy and a new staff member, Miss Wilson find that they and the rest of the girls in the home, have a lot in common. Miss Wilson finds herself at odds with her employers.
The love scenes with the chain-link fence, not replicated by any as far as I know, is not to be missed.
Greened-Eyed Blond is at times a tear jerker, especially if you have a soft spot. As well as a warning for all teenage girls and the establishment!
The love scenes with the chain-link fence, not replicated by any as far as I know, is not to be missed.
Greened-Eyed Blond is at times a tear jerker, especially if you have a soft spot. As well as a warning for all teenage girls and the establishment!
Betsy Abel is the new girl at a Los Angeles reform school for girls. She is distraught after giving up her baby. She refuses to name the baby's father and hates the sight of the baby. Other girls include the volatile Cuckoo and short timer Green Eyes (Susan Oliver). New kind-hearted teacher Maggie Wilson tries to be the girls' friend. Cuckoo steals Betsy's baby out of her parents' car. The girls decide to hide the baby.
I actually like for a good while. It's not going over the top until Girls Gone Wild. I get the idea of that section, but the movie feels less real with it. Maybe that scene should done with one or two girls. I like a lot of these young performers. This seems to be transitioning from the 50's to the 60's.
I actually like for a good while. It's not going over the top until Girls Gone Wild. I get the idea of that section, but the movie feels less real with it. Maybe that scene should done with one or two girls. I like a lot of these young performers. This seems to be transitioning from the 50's to the 60's.
I used to catch this film fairly regularly back in the days when local TV stations ran the Late Show, the Late-Late Show, the Omigosh Are YOU Still Up? Show etc. instead of infomercials (**sigh...**) "Gone With the Wind" it's not, but I found it surprisingly memorable anyway and would like to find it on VHS or DVD someday. a lot of the movies I saw in those days--well, I don't remember having seen them until I see them again on AMC or Turner, or on the bargain-basement video rack at Wal-Mart. for some reason, "The Green-Eyed Blonde" stuck (I can even remember the downbeat theme music!) I've never seen it in any company's video catalog, though... (***SIGH...***)
There is so much to say about this movie: that it is focused on teen pregnancy in a frank way that was never done in 1950s film or literature and portrays the teens in a respectful way, that it has black actresses treated as equal to everyone else in terms of character and a strong, positive black father character, that it addresses the mental health challenges of "troubled" teen girls, that it includes statutory rape by step fathers and on and on. Yes, it's a B movie and has all that comes with that: exaggerated performances, low rent production values and lots of stereotypes. The parents of the main character are almost too horrible and extreme to be believed - unless you are a social worker or teacher and then, yeah, you know these kind of people really do exist, even now (leaving a baby in the back seat of a car, referring to the baby as "it", and on and on). But it's extraordinarily thoughtful for 1957 - that is probably thanks to Dalton Trumbo. Not sure about the title, as this is Betsy's story, not "Green Eyes". Buddy's mom aversion to her son isn't condemned the way it would be in a movie now. The guide to infant care that the girls read from is hilarious - it always has an answer to every question! But be prepared for very, very disturbing behavior by "cuckoo" - if you are horrified by even the mention of animal abuse, don't watch this. As for the ending... no spoilers, but WHAT THE HELL?!?!
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesOne of the juvenile delinquent inmates says she's restyling her hair to look like Doris Day--an in-joke reference to producer Martin Melcher's then-wife.
- PatzerWhen Cuckoo removes the wooden box with the baby from the car, nothing is on the sides of the box; when the girls are taking care of him in their room, the evaporated-milk brand name emblazons the box's sides and end panels. Cuckoo steals the baby in a wooden crate. When the baby is brought upstairs the girls have obviously moved him into a cardboard box that has the Cordell's evaporated milk labeling.
- Zitate
Mrs. Nichols: Betsy Abel. Two months ago she had an illegitimate baby, a baby boy, who is now in the custody of her mother. Her mother's boyfriend is a taxi driver with a police record. The girl won't tell who the father is; so, we have another inmate. She's assigned to your cottage. Well, I suppose we better look the little criminal over.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Bikers, Blondes and Blood (1993)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 16 Min.(76 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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