अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThree teenagers with troubled families are unable to adjust at home and in high-school. Tempted with an easy, carefree life they soon pass from misdemeanors into serious crime - and will suf... सभी पढ़ेंThree teenagers with troubled families are unable to adjust at home and in high-school. Tempted with an easy, carefree life they soon pass from misdemeanors into serious crime - and will suffer for it. Sometimes, repentance comes too late.Three teenagers with troubled families are unable to adjust at home and in high-school. Tempted with an easy, carefree life they soon pass from misdemeanors into serious crime - and will suffer for it. Sometimes, repentance comes too late.
- Tommy Burns
- (as Frank J. Gorshin)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The parents of one girl are verging on being bourgeois-bohemian, having parties and drinking booze all the time. Another girl has a bitter hyper-conservative catholic single dad whose domination of her is almost a bit creepy in an incestuous way. Whilst the angry uber-sarcastic and highly enjoyable girl (definately too sophisticated to be realistic) is simply left to fend for herself by some terrible mother who has gone abroad.
Other great characters such as the con-man brother, the streetwise grifter, and maternal and tough private dancer... The film seemed to be struggling with the fine art of pleasing the teen and parent viewer alike, which makes it a curio... so much so that the typical moralising end seemed beleaguered
It was kind of touching too, as these three rebellious teen girls wouldn't have been rebelling if two of them had had just half of the love and attention they'd needed at home, and the other less attention and more love.
One girl's a real rebel, while the other two allow themselves to be led astray, but only on the surface.
You also get to see why things got the way they did by getting to know the parents, and it's a far cry from Ozzie and Harriet. One of the girl's mothers makes the biggest impression by not being present at all, which leads her daughter down the path of no return.
There are other characters that enhance the story (like the boyfriend of one of the girls and the brother of another) and the movie manages to hold your attention.
Good acting here, and a bittersweet ending.
If you like discerning the undertones in what seem like otherwise run of the mill turgid trash, this entry into the era's proliferating teen angst potboiler, scripted by a Lou Rushoof apparently based on his own social worker experiences*, soon offers up some surprisingly nod and a wink, raised eyebrow readings.
So scripted absolutely chock a block full of fabulous lines throughout, it's ostensibly aimed at the then new phenomena of teenagers, first with some fun constant of their times youth patter (slang - all 'Daddy** cool' type stuff), with then their travails against their square parents; so despite much of a 'drag' (man), *what soon leaps outta the scriptwriting is some pretty on the nose ideas.
Three soon to be of age gal teens are having to each deal with their variously (to blame?) unreasonable, exasperating parents (*Lou's meaning?), as like for single parented Mary with her (ancient) Dad** who apparently had been deserted by his "evil" woman Missus, so is raising (supervising!) Mary in a decidedly suspect way of discipline, as that in the like Father like son inference, as who, apparently, 'leathered' him beyond his daughter's now age, and so presumably inferred is how daughter Mary is, so single-parented way raised, too; (well, note the dialogue and scene for when she retreats into her room, after he has just parentally seen off her beau at doorstep with: "Go home sonny boy, go home and wipe your nose .. and don't come back her again; I see you talking to Mary, I'll take you across my knee and lick ya"! Well, blimey!) and whom later observes that "he's been taking it out on you ever since" (i.e. That's boyfriend Bobby's (Steven Tarrell) presumably inside knowledge of what her Daddy does, assessment! 'S'truth!) And presumably inferring just WHY, you might guess, can well imagine his "evil" wife took off!** (*Plus, if Rusoff was so inspired by his own social worker experiences; I can well imagine this may well have piqued with some teen audience, some of own possibly real home life reflection in those teen turbulent times- and why was so scripted in!)
Well anyway; so, later, for marriage besotted Bobby, still trying to get her to accept - so, honest woman-making - his marriage proposal to her, he portends: "I guess you're gonna have to choose, Mary; me - or your Father." * Hmm; what could it all infer (Lou!)? Sheesh!
But á la the title there's three eponymous 'runaway' daughters to this: so, another is pint sized spitfire, 'Angela' (Gloria Costillo) and who then surely does display the kind of anti-authority acting out behaviour, as at the college, that would surely deserve just such type of retribution ('leather' disciplining!)
But, what's of real attraction to watch throughout, is to see rare appearance of main star, dark eyebrowed and maned Marla English, á la Taylor or Gardner like, as 'Audrey, daughter' - (she was then 21) - who has to maturingly negotiate through those of her own party fond parents, flirty Mom (Anna Sten) and as more grandfather looking, Dad.** (John Litel), and who (her, daughter, Marla) is scripted to have to contend with the sorta hypocritical moral turpitude of her party fond parents' angle; even more so when, her seemingly foreign = meaning, exotic, risqué, accented Mom is portrayed as a philandering floozy herself: party time canoodling with oily seemingly way beyond mid-aged party guest, them inadvertently caught by daughter Audrey in mid flirt embrace: that so thrilling that her own frustrated beau (Frank Gorshin***) states it'd probably be better to target her Mum for potential satisfaction! Sheesh (again)!
** that's another thing here; the Dads are all played by guys that would have been better cast as Grandfathers!
Her coming of age into adulthood birthday party**** thrown by her parents, with thus mixed gen attendees, is a hoot to 'witness' (soused Dad, so seemingly not blind bit concerned at his wife cutting up a rug with that oily neighbour - again, as who even pointedly, ah, observes: "I'm glad I'm not your husband"!)
At which, then onto al fresco, the home's front lawn, the old (=Mary's) Dad and young Bobby paramour then tussle, with all the party guests - so including all these fine upstanding, responsible parents, too - just watching on, is appalling, if a reflection of what could pass for routine in those days?
Eventually, all leads to a 'fallen woman' predicament, warning polemic ***** ("You better get out there; I've got an investment in you! .. most of the gals have side rackets"; is wise madam Miss Petrie (Anne O'Neal) sage observational advice, as whom since also dictates, to tell it straight and short (kid), the 'You're a Dad' letter, shows how easy it was to solve such paternity 'challenges' back then.
So, along with these surely intentional (one guy scriptwriter; Lou Rusoff) patriarchal control - a 'that's just what they deserve' disciplinary thrill undertones to - plus starring, too, the little seen gorgeous Marla, plus that minx Gloria Castillo, too - this little pot-boiler, can be quite relished with a (fatherly?!) jaundiced, cynical viewing.
In short, top trash stuff to wallow in. (But don't watch with your daughter unless firmly assured of how times have changed!)
*** So, yup, he of the latter T. V. Batman series, Riddler character squeal deliveries, in this, seeming to play a similar hyper-active role and spouting all kinds of cool hep cat type slang.
**** oh, and just check out the gift they just nonchalantly have 'wrapped' for her in the driveway! Wow; yet she is so ennuied by her parents that "she couldn't care less" about it.
Ok, plot spoiler: it's a brand new shiny huge Caddy (Eldorado?) convertible!
***** as see similar, same era, 'The Flesh Merchants'; also reviewed hereunder, too.
Unfortunately, they didn't bother here.
Thus, unlike "High School Hellcats" and more especially "I Was a Teenage Werewolf," both of which benefited enormously from shadowy, film noir lighting schemes, and (fairly) well dressed settings, "Runaway Daughters" looks all of $2.98 cents.
This can be OK when the lackluster visuals are counterbalanced by an arresting storyline. But alas, the story here is little more than a synopsis of something probably rejected by the "Police Gazette".
Here goes: three teenage girls from different socio-economic circumstances link up to run away from home, in this case to LA, where they quickly become "dime a dance girls" (under the tutelage of Minksy voiced Adele Jergens--"on a good night you might clear $12.00" and "watch out for cockroaches").
Apart from the fact that taxi dancers were already way out by the late 50's, the script is handicapped by more serious problems, chiefly the fact that the girls don't run away until 2/3 of the way into the picture. Thus, we sit through multiple scenes of them sulking and arguing with their respective families.
These altercations include one in which one of our anti-heroines decks a 70 year old schoolmarm onto the lawn! Stereotypically, adults are all misguided at best in this, and of course, the blame for the youngsters delinquency is laid fully at their doorstep.
And what parents!--(if you have been pining away to see 30's film stalwarts, Anna Sten and John Litel, perform a drunken Charleston, then this is your film).
As previously mentioned, production values are lamentably skimpy. For example, the fabulously wealthy Marla English character lives in what appears to be a typical 50's subdivision tract house, with cut rate Danish modern furniture, and nary a hint of a servant.
For Frank Gorshen and AIP completists only
As far as these sorts of films go, "Runaway Daughters" is pretty typical...though not as lurid as some of the films. One parent overly controls his daughter and acts as if fun and boyfriends are evil, one set of parents simply are never home and another set of parents are so busy partying and carousing themselves that they couldn't care less about their daughter's behaviors. As for the boys, many as simply perverts who are out for one thing and one thing only (and it's NOT a soda down at the malt shop). A few (the highly indulgent and indifferent mom) are horrible actors and all the stories come off as incredibly simplistic. Deep is not a word I'd use to describe this movie!
So is it worth seeing? Well, not if you want to see a good movie...it stinks. However, I happen to be a person who loves exploitation and youth gone wild movies....and for folks like me, this one is quite enjoyable...though not even close to being as entertaining or titillating as my two favorites, "Reefer Madness" and "Sex Madness", both by the same crappy filmmakers. In fact, for the genre this one has reasonably good production values...which isn't saying much. Some other similar bad movies you might want to seek out include: "Delinquent Daughters", "Where Are Your Children?", "Enlighten Thy Daughter", "Youth Run Wild" as well as "The Terrible Truth"....among others.
*In almost all these films, the 'youth' appear to be in their 20s or 30s! This one features actors that appear close to being teens but clearly many of them are NOT youth nor have been for quite some time! At 20, 22 and 26, the ffemale leads are not exactly youthful.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe film was refused a UK cinema certificate in 1956 before being passed with extensive cuts and an 'X' certificate the following year. The DVD is PG rated and uncut.
- गूफ़Audrey is given a (top down) convertible car (Caddy Eldorado?), and drives it off at "two in the morning" (Mom); next seen in daylight, heavy traffic, town, she picks up the other two 'runaways'; when chased by the police, they are suddenly driving a covered top station wagon version.
- भाव
Angela Forrest: Her father's probably got her chained to the bedpost.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in It Came from Hollywood (1982)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Tonårsrevolt
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 32 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1