अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ें"Think of a law, they've broken it. Think of a crime, they've committed it." A tense, tough story of a teenage gang committing acts of robbery, violence, and murder. The leader of the gang f... सभी पढ़ें"Think of a law, they've broken it. Think of a crime, they've committed it." A tense, tough story of a teenage gang committing acts of robbery, violence, and murder. The leader of the gang finds himself torn between his own brother and his sleazy (but very good-looking) girlfrien... सभी पढ़ें"Think of a law, they've broken it. Think of a crime, they've committed it." A tense, tough story of a teenage gang committing acts of robbery, violence, and murder. The leader of the gang finds himself torn between his own brother and his sleazy (but very good-looking) girlfriend. 35mm.
- पुरस्कार
- 1 जीत और कुल 2 नामांकन
- Freddy Borchert
- (as Henry Bookholt)
- Sissy Bohl
- (as Karen Baal)
- Rita
- (as Ruth Mueller)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Horst Buchholz (billed as Henry Bookholt to fool us, which doesn't work) plays the leader of a gang, and for most of the film, they do nothing but terrorize the audience with tedium. Buchholz' girlfriend is played by Karin Baal, who is cute and is a fairly decent actress. She seems somewhat torn between Buchholz and his brother, but she is really playing them both. The plot, which is finally revealed after about an hour, involves Buchholz and his pals robbing a mail truck. They end up with squat, and everyone gets ticked off at Buchholz. In one final attempt to score, Buchholz leads his gang of losers to rob a house owned by one of the gang's bosses, a guy named Garezzo. The German guy playing Garezzo tosses out a few Italian words in an attempt to convince us he is really not a German guy playing an Italian guy.
The first six minutes of this film are very bizarre, as we see lots of teenage boys cavorting in and around an indoor swimming pool. Oh, there are a few girls as well, but the camera seems to linger on the very short and tight bathing trunks that the guys are wearing. The guys are all well-toned, with bulging quadriceps, hard abs, a hint of gluteus maxima, the pool water glistening like dew off their Adonis-like physiques ... oh, sorry, my mind just wandered for a moment.
The acting is acceptable, but it can't save this film. Buchholz actually shines in a few scenes, but that's only because the light is reflected off his leather pants.
Freddy (Buchholz) is a young sociopath who has little regard for others, lies incessantly and has a taste for violence. The film makes it clear that Freddy learned this sort of violence from his nasty father and through the course of the film, Freddy tries his best to turn his younger brother into a creep just like him. Additionally, Freddy has a pathological need to control his young friends and insist they join him in a life of crime. Eventually, naturally, this results in nasty consequences...not a career in politics (the other field in which budding sociopaths excel).
I noticed one reviewer compared this to "Rebel Without a Cause" and to me this is not a fair comparison. In "Rebel", James Dean's character and the rest WANT to fit in and be good but just don't fit. In "Teenage Wolfpack" the emphasis is on NOT fitting in and being evil....not a rowdy teen but evil. Because of this, the film lacks the depth of "Rebel", though it is enjoyable in a simple and less complicated way.
Is this a film you should rush out to see? No. It's reasonably well made but also a bit tedious after a while. I found myself just wanting to see Freddy get his just due and end it all.
But James Dean, Sal Mineo and Natalie Wood play sensible youths, who run into an emotional crisis while in contact with their surroundings (so triggering the Youth-Revolution against narrow structures),while Horst Buchholz, Karin Baal and the others are merely youthful criminals, who could have appeared as well in films from, say, the 1930's.
James Dean in 'Rebel' may seem emotionally unstable, but he is never brutal, like Horst Buchholz in 'Die Halbstarken' (who, above all, acts very dumb). It looks to me, in comparison, as if Nicholas Ray, director of 'Rebel', wanted to describe an emotional situation and a thereby starting Rebellion, while 'Die Halbstarken' wanted to warn against this Rebellion, according to the opinions of the grown-ups of that time. The German film wanted to demonstrate an immaturity and malignity of the so-called 'Halbstarken', and so seems to be a moralizing anti-youth-rebel-story, and therefore wholly different from 'Rebel without a cause'.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe American distributor billed Horst Buchholz as "Henry Bookholt", and Karin Baal as "Karen" Baal to help disguise the foreign origin of the film.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Horst Buchholz... mein Papa (2005)
- साउंडट्रैकIn Chicago
by Mister Martin's Band
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- DEM 420(अनुमानित)
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 37 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.66 : 1