IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,8/10
195
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA street-gang member kills the gang's leader and blames it on a rival gang.A street-gang member kills the gang's leader and blames it on a rival gang.A street-gang member kills the gang's leader and blames it on a rival gang.
Doug McGrath
- Detective Lambert
- (as Douglas McGrath)
Joe Renteria
- Carlos Garvanza
- (as Joe Reteria)
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So okay, I'm biased; they filmed this at my high school (Santa Maria High School) in '75, and I was one of the $15-a-day extras that walked up and down the corridors carefully not looking at the camera. Still...there *are* others who have seen this movie?! If you saw this movie, please send me a note, I'd love to know why..........
Saw this movie one hot August day in Seattle in '76. Was drawn by the lurid ad and the cheap matinee price. Instead of the chain wielding, snarling,figure on the one-sheet imagine how surprising it was to find out the lead actor was a skinny, blond-haired, blue-eyed pretty boy. The whole movie is clearly awful, the lead actor wouldn't cut muster in a high-school production and the others aren't much better including Steve Bond, latter of General Hospital and Canadian Doug McGrath of the classic Goin' Down the Road six years earlier. Understand that lead actor David Kyle became a missionary, a complete about-face from his role here.
The movie was no better than the usual drive-in fare being produced at that time but at least it's storyline, about high school gangs was a little more 'meaty' than the usual teen hi-jinks comedies of the time. A guilty pleasure? Not really, but at least it may have been trying to convey something about high school violence and dysfunctional families. Or not.
Incidently this movie was released on video under the title Cruisin' High which made it sound like either the typical teen hi-jinks comedy or set in a gay high school. Either way it was misleading since very little of the action takes place in a high school and the cruising involves gang rumbles.
May hold some interest to those who love movies of the time and the differing attitudes of today.
The movie was no better than the usual drive-in fare being produced at that time but at least it's storyline, about high school gangs was a little more 'meaty' than the usual teen hi-jinks comedies of the time. A guilty pleasure? Not really, but at least it may have been trying to convey something about high school violence and dysfunctional families. Or not.
Incidently this movie was released on video under the title Cruisin' High which made it sound like either the typical teen hi-jinks comedy or set in a gay high school. Either way it was misleading since very little of the action takes place in a high school and the cruising involves gang rumbles.
May hold some interest to those who love movies of the time and the differing attitudes of today.
This is a really fun 70's street gang film! I'm sure it's not good as far as editing goes (like that other reviewer said), but who pays attention to that(?); only nurd film majors! It's a violent gang b movie and it'll make you laugh out loud at it's cheesiness. Plus they cruise around in a cherry 57 buick! So watch it, it's a goodie! that's if you can find this rare gem at a old video store. Seriously this film made me laugh, especially when they let that kid who looked like he was 10 in the gang. Plus the music is pretty funny, with a cheesy garagey theme song "Slow Down Baby". My favorite line from the film is happens after this rival black pimp gang hassle with the all white silks about a drug deal gone bad they say "lets get out of here I feel like I'm in Disneyland".
Wow - this movie is unbelievable. The tone of the whole thing is so Jeckyl and Hyde - you have to laugh. The film opens with grave quotes from law enforcement experts on how teen gangs are the "corrosive acid to our society" and so on, and then the movie opens with a bunch teen gang members driving around to a song so non-threatening, so soft, so flaccid that it is unintentionally hilarious. The song "Baby, Slow Down" sounds like soft rock that even Firefall wouldn't sing.But the best part is the lead role - this guy is supposed to be this dangerous, seething guy capable of rape, murder, etc. and the "actor" who plays Cat looks like he should be singing Godspell or Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. He's blonde, blue eyed and slightly effeminate - so its a riot when he's threatening black drug dealers or knife wielding Mexicans - this is the kind of movie where some of the supposed high schoolers are played by people who look thirty (like the guys in shower who are knifed). One interesting side note - a young John Ashton plays a high school coach who might have "seen something" - he's easily the best actor in the film (and there is plenty of bad acting) but Ashton went on to big hits like Beverly Hills Cop (he's Judge Reinholds, grumpy partner) and Midnight Run (where he's the sleazy bounty hunter competing with DeNiro). The film is filled with wimpy guys doing Grease talk, mixed in with Bowery Boys and yet some harsh violence. A mess. A weird mess.
I suppose there was never a time when CAT MURKIL AND THE SILKS would have been called a good movie, critically speaking, but it has become a minor camp mini-classic with its 30-year vintage. The subject matter at hand, although presented in a way we might see as naive, is actually far more relevant today than it was at that time, and considerably more consequential.
No-good, scrawny little punk "Cat" Murkil is the unlikely leader of a honky high school gang that wreaks terror on anyone standing in the way of their juvie-delinquent hijinks. Pitted against racially sectionalized gangs from other sectors of town, they find themselves in a revolving door of violent paybacks in a blood-soaked teenage gang war.
With performances ranging from awful to adequate, and rather poorly paced, this low-budget curiosity piece is best viewed by patient bad movie fans. While far from the worst film I have ever seen(with a few legitimately good moments), I rate it cheritably at 4/10.
No-good, scrawny little punk "Cat" Murkil is the unlikely leader of a honky high school gang that wreaks terror on anyone standing in the way of their juvie-delinquent hijinks. Pitted against racially sectionalized gangs from other sectors of town, they find themselves in a revolving door of violent paybacks in a blood-soaked teenage gang war.
With performances ranging from awful to adequate, and rather poorly paced, this low-budget curiosity piece is best viewed by patient bad movie fans. While far from the worst film I have ever seen(with a few legitimately good moments), I rate it cheritably at 4/10.
Wusstest du schon
- Zitate
[the gang pulls up to the high school and hear a game going on inside]
Marble: Hey, will ya listen to that? I wonder what the score is!
Punch: Ah, who gives a shit? The only score I'm interested in is the one I might make if some foxy chicks start pilin' outta there.
Bumps: [laughs] I can dig it, bro.
- Alternative VersionenRe-release under the title "Cruisin' High" cuts some of the more violent shots, such as the bullet impacts on the characters. This causes noticeable jumps in the picture and audio.
- VerbindungenReferences Einsatz in Manhattan (1973)
- SoundtracksSlow Down Baby
Sung by Hollingsworth
Words and Music by Mark Hollingsworth, Bernie Kaai Lewis, William C. Thomas
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- CATS - Die Klasse von 1976
- Drehorte
- Kalifornien, USA(Location)
- Produktionsfirma
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