Reform school for rich girls behaving badly, is a good cover for the misbehaving adults in charge.Reform school for rich girls behaving badly, is a good cover for the misbehaving adults in charge.Reform school for rich girls behaving badly, is a good cover for the misbehaving adults in charge.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
- Mrs. Kargen
- (as Eileene Stevens)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Walker whose best career years were behind her knew this was a turkey and she gobbled through her role like Thanksgiving was coming up. Nurse Ratched had nothing on this woman who runs a school like a prison with generous doses of sadism and a corrupt staff of whom she has something on each one.
But our story here concerns Walker planning something truly sinister for amnesia patient Susan Morrow and in the process getting her hands on a fortune.
To find out what you watch the film for. But fans of bad Ed Wood or Arch Hall films will love Walker in the lead. Even us more discerning fans will appreciate what she does to save a turkey.
Dr. John Page has just been hired out of graduate school...and on the surface his job would seem like a great one. After all, he's been hired to work at an exclusive girls school. However, this is not your typical, ordinary girls school. Despite their coming from rich families, many of the residents seem more like head cases-- schizophrenics, nymphomaniacs, pyros and the like--all young ladies their rich families would rather just forget! But it is much worse...one of the girls is part of a very strange and elaborate plot. But any time the doctor tries to do his job and behave like a professional, the headmistress seems to get in the way--like there's something she's hiding. But what?!
This is in some ways an exploitation film--with the ladies undergoing torture and mistreatment by employees of the 'school' that seem more like matrons from the prison film "Caged"! But the plot is much more complex and interesting...making it a truly unusual film. While the plot has a few minor problems, the overall film is surprisingly good despite all the icky aspects of the picture.
Plot-wise it seems that straight-arrow Dr. Page (Elliott) takes a job at a girls reform institution, but soon finds the place is more like a Nazi prison camp, run by scheming witch Dixon (Walker). Despite believability, I guess the girls' wealthy parents don't care. Then too, the faculty features such professional types as an elderly professor who gleefully chopped up his wife with a meat cleaver, while discipline takes the form of hanging the girls by wrists under a stream of running water. The sheer steadfastness of the movie makers' approach comes close to camp, but somehow I couldn't even chuckle.
Too bad the tragic Helen Walker had to settle for this mess. She was so good at scheming, e.g. Nightmare Alley (1947). On the downgrade, she still shows her stuff in a thankless role. Meanwhile, that familiar utility actor, Ross Elliott, gets a colorless lead role, but still does his best. Also, can't help noticing that the queen of scream, Beverly Garland (Nancy) gets to unload a real lung blaster. And catch that abrupt ending, like they suddenly ran out of film. Anyway, the screenplay's a mess so unless you're a Helen Walker fan like me, skip it.
Did you know
- TriviaIn an interview [in the 1970s], Mara Corday was asked about her work in "occasional small movies" before Universal, and she answered: «Yes, like Problem Girls, which I just saw again. It was done in a big mansion called the Brunswick Mansion on Adams Boulevard in L.A. It was the most horrible sound system and the lighting was just atrocious because we were in a house, not in a real studio. And it was directed by a man who was like 90 years old. He had done a classic German picture called Variety [1925], he could barely speak English, and he was just hanging by a thread! Helen Walker, the star of that film, had just gotten arrested for hit-and-run and it literally destroyed her career, because she was guilty, she was drunk - and she was drinking all through the picture, too. The director would yell up, "Quiet!" and she'd yell down, "F*** you!"»
The poor state of the mansion used for location is confirmed by the fact that 3528 West Adams would last only until 1955, when, on June 20 of that year, the Department of Building and Safety issued a permit for its demolition. The director Ewald André Dupont died in 1956 at age 67, but he was already ill in 1953.
- Quotes
Miss Dixon: [Miss Dixon enters as Dr Manning attempts to hide a drink] Where did you get it?
Dr. Manning: You're mistaken. Your constant suspicion makes you see things that in reality do not exist. In other words, a mirage of the eye followed by a wish of the mind.
Miss Dixon: [Grabbing the glass] Don't give me any of your professorial platitudes, you disgusting old sot! I won't have you seen this way. You're a disgrace to the position you hold here. I don't know why I ever bother with...
Miss Dixon: [She discovers a hidden bottle] Will you tell me who smuggled this filthy stuff in here for you? Will you?
Miss Dixon: [There is a knock on the door] Straighten up. Wipe your mouth, you're slobbering.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 11 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1