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Mad Youth

  • 1939
  • Approved
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
319
YOUR RATING
Mad Youth (1939)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:03
1 Video
15 Photos
Drama

A rich society mother hires a male escort, but he falls for her daughter instead. The mother-daughter conflict forces the daughter to run off to stay with a friend who is enslaved by a prost... Read allA rich society mother hires a male escort, but he falls for her daughter instead. The mother-daughter conflict forces the daughter to run off to stay with a friend who is enslaved by a prostitution ring.A rich society mother hires a male escort, but he falls for her daughter instead. The mother-daughter conflict forces the daughter to run off to stay with a friend who is enslaved by a prostitution ring.

  • Director
    • Melville Shyer
  • Writer
    • Willis Kent
  • Stars
    • Mary Ainslee
    • Betty Compson
    • Willy Castello
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    319
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Melville Shyer
    • Writer
      • Willis Kent
    • Stars
      • Mary Ainslee
      • Betty Compson
      • Willy Castello
    • 19User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:03
    Official Trailer

    Photos14

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    Top cast26

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    Mary Ainslee
    Mary Ainslee
    • Marian Morgan
    Betty Compson
    Betty Compson
    • Lucy Morgan
    Willy Castello
    Willy Castello
    • Count DeHoven
    Betty Atkinson
    • Helen Johnson
    Tommy Wonder
    Tommy Wonder
    • Harry
    Lorelei Readoux
    • Beth
    Margaret Fealy
    Margaret Fealy
    • Helen's Grandmother
    Donald Kerr
    • Taxi Driver
    Ray Hirsch
    • Jitter Bug
    Patti Lacey
    • Jitter Bug
    Eugene Taylor
    • Jitter Bug
    Caren Marsh
    • Jitter Bug
    • (as Aileen Morris)
    Maxine Taylor
    • Jitter Bug
    Pearl Tolson
    • Jitter Bug
    Monte Collins
    • Stewart - Singing Bridge Player
    • (as Monty Collins)
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Steve Clemente
    Steve Clemente
    • Knife-Thrower in Club Act
    • (uncredited)
    Glen Dennison
    • Jitter Bug
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Melville Shyer
    • Writer
      • Willis Kent
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    4.9319
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    Featured reviews

    4Leofwine_draca

    Sleazy morality story

    MAD YOUTH is another morality fable which looks at the plight of young girls caught up in vice and prostitution. As usual it tells the tale of an innocent young girl who, through no fault of her own, ends up being imprisoned inside a brothel. Who can save her and will they manage to do it in time?

    This film has a slightly different angle to the rest in that the focus of the drama is on the relationship between mother and daughter. In fact, it's the mother's actions - in particular her cavorting with male prostitutes (!) - that causes the daughter to flee from her familial situation and fall into something even worse. Thus the film's erstwhile moral question is whether parents are responsible for the behaviour of their offspring.

    There's some cheesy, heavy-handed moralising here, alongside the usual low-rent production values common in such sensationalist dramas. The acting is fairly average, although a little better than I've seen elsewhere. The film also picks up in the last twenty minutes, becoming something of a suspense thriller, and it even offers up some fun fight scenes; sadly it's not enough to make this a good film overall.
    5st-shot

    Forever 21

    American society dames get a cuffing and a lecture on parenthood from a faux count gigolo in this pre-war cheapie looking to cash in on lurid sensationalism. Disjointed and sloppy most of the way it unintentionally (or indifferently)entertains with titillating moralizing as women of all ages pre-sage this age of narcissism with self centered abandon.

    Upper cruster Lucy Morgan (Betty Compson) spends most of her time playing bridge with fellow elites and buying the attention of phony counts from an escort service while ignoring daughter Marian (Mary Ainslee) who throws wild parties while she is absent. Enter Count Dehoven (Willy Castello), gigolo with a conscience and the attention of both mom and daughter. The Count falls heavily for the daughter much to mom's consternation, causing a major rift that sends Marian off to live with her star struck friend who in reality is being held hostage in a bordello, a fate now awaiting Marian. Can she be rescued? Looks like a job for the Count.

    This crass high society expose may lack subtlety, second takes and production values of any kind but it does offer some warped incite into the era ( jitterbugging teens, absentee parents) via cautionary tale and the offbeat casting of a suave two bit gigolo as its moral conscience. Battling the hackneyed script and his own limited abilities Willy Costello brings both the unctuous and noble out in his Count DeHoven.

    Ainslee's Marian is a bit long in the tooth for a confused teen but silent screen superstar in career free fall Compson is indomitable in a low key Billie Burke sought of style as an incurable romantic and while their scenes together lack smoothness they do confront the heart of the matter.

    Mad Youth puts on no airs as it plows its way to its tepid climax but it does score points with its Code challenging moments and fun juxtaposing of the generations; the younger caught up in an energized frenzy at a party (featuring in another bizarre twist a baton twirler in full uniform) while their ever so proper parents battle ennui at bridge tables in another part of town with Ma Morgan attempting to bed the count, forever lying about her age.

    Mad Youth may be a bad film but under the right circumstances it can be quite entertaining.
    5planktonrules

    For a sleazy exploitation film, this is a cut above the rest!

    This is a sleazy little film about "white slavery"--in other words, women forced into prostitution. While the budget was obviously very low and the production values low, this film actually was pretty watchable due to decent writing--as the plot often surprised me and wasn't completely telegraphed (something usual for the genre). Oddly, while the writing isn't bad, portions of the film look like a second-rate talent show, as various acts (some good, some bad) parade through two scenes that are largely irrelevant. In the first one, there are two excellent jitterbug dancers (this makes sense at a "wild party") and a drum major (huh??!?!). Later, it's pretty much the same.

    The plot itself concerns a very vain and stupid mother who is too busy running around with male escorts (the real type, not male prostitutes). Her favorite male escort begins dating her daughter on the sly and you assume he's up to no good--especially since she seems pretty "fast". However, where the film goes next and the actual character of this man was very unexpected--making this very low-budget film worth a peek. Aside from a few poor performances and the odd talent show portions, it's a pretty good suspense film about the seamier side of life.

    By the way, for an exploitation film, this one does NOT have any nude scenes--the plot is rather adult and there are some women in lingerie but that's really about all.
    6wes-connors

    In the Mood for the Forties

    Shapely sweater-clad Mary Ainslee (as Marian Morgan) enjoys wild nights partying while "lonesome" mother Betty Compson (as Lucy) prefers quieter evenings playing bridge with "dedicated and refined" gigolos like accented immigrant Willy Castello (as "Count" DeKoven). With her alimony check spent, Ms. Compson can't afford the extra charge for Mr. Castello's "love" on their first date, but future funds mean "necking" sessions. Then, when Castello meets Ms. Ainslee, both mother and daughter desire the same man. Are Castello's intentions good, or "strictly dishonorable?"

    "Mad Youth" takes an unexpected turn for a last act, after skirting with some actual depth. The performances of Ainslee and Compson become quite good, and intriguingly natural. It's nice to see women portrayed as interested in sex (for a change). After the rival mother and daughter share a marvelous scene, the story returns to its lurid roots. The dissolve and double exposures used for Ainslee's "drunk scene" and Compson's discovery of her daughter's diary are well done. The uninhibited dancing of Tommy Wonder and the "Jitter Bugs" is another highlight. Watch for the slinky blonde prostitute to stand in front of a revealing lamp, and one of the fighters to split his pants, in the film's final minutes.

    ****** Mad Youth (5/5/40) Melville Shyer ~ Mary Ainslee, Betty Compson, Willy Castello, Tommy Wonder
    7AAdaSC

    Mad, just so mad

    Nothing really mad going on here at all, of course, apart from the heavy-handed moralizing as delivered by gigolo Count Willy Castello which will have you laughing out loud. And that is the point of these type of films - they are unintentionally hilarious in parts. It's what makes them good entertainment.

    The story starts with Betty Compson (Lucy) phoning up for an escort as usual. On this evening she gets Willy Castello and she is not shy in coming forward! She takes him home where they meet up with her daughter Mary Ainslee (Marian). Big mistake. Castello takes a shine to the daughter and they start dating behind the mum's back. Ha ha. This must have happened so many times in real life. Well, the youth party and dance away but there is a new storyline introduced when Ainslee's best friend Betty Atkinson (Helen) absconds from home in response to an advert. The reality is that she has become a prossie and Ainslee unknowingly gets caught up in her plight when she pays her a visit. We need a hero to come and save them.

    Meanwhile, Compson ends the film as she started it - by calling up an escort/gigolo to spend her evening with. She really has got life sussed. A good role model.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Orchestra and all acts by courtesy of La Golondrina Cafe, Los Angeles.
    • Quotes

      Count DeHoven: You mean to tell me you let your daughter go and visit Helen without even knowing where she lives?

      Lucy Morgan: Well, yes. She said she'd write in a few days.

      Count DeHoven: But all we know about Helen is that she ran away to marry a man she had never seen. A man she met through a matrimonial agency advertisement.

      Lucy Morgan: Yes, I... I guess that is so.

      Count DeHoven: Don't you know that some of those agencies are the worst kind of traps? That many of the customers are criminals, morons, white slavers, or people who are mentally or physically diseased?

      Lucy Morgan: Oh, I've never given it a thought.

      Count DeHoven: Oh, you American mothers, with your Bridge parties, and beauty shops, and your silly flirtations. Wasting your lives and neglecting your duties. Letting your children run wild for lack of sensible parental supervision.

      Lucy Morgan: Oh, you don't know American children. They're spoiled and disobedient, and drunken.

      Count DeHoven: Drunken? Yes, drunk with the exuberance of youth and sheer joy of living. There's nothing really wrong with the children of today. Nothing that proper environment and congenial home life wouldn't correct.

      Lucy Morgan: What do you expect us modern mothers to do?

      Count DeHoven: Quit trying to be butterflies. Get back to the business of being mothers, like your mother, and your grandmother, and generations of mothers before them.

    • Connections
      Edited into Confessions of a Vice Baron (1943)
    • Soundtracks
      I'd Rather Be a Bum on Broadway Than an Angel in the Sky

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 5, 1940 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Girls of the Underworld
    • Production company
      • Willis Kent Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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