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IMDbPro

The Violent Years

  • 1956
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
3.6/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Jean Moorhead in The Violent Years (1956)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Paula Parkins is the teenage daughter of wealthy parents who can't seem to make time for her, so she looks for thrills as the leader of her all girl-gang who rob and rape young men.Paula Parkins is the teenage daughter of wealthy parents who can't seem to make time for her, so she looks for thrills as the leader of her all girl-gang who rob and rape young men.Paula Parkins is the teenage daughter of wealthy parents who can't seem to make time for her, so she looks for thrills as the leader of her all girl-gang who rob and rape young men.

  • Director
    • William Morgan
  • Writer
    • Edward D. Wood Jr.
  • Stars
    • Jean Moorhead
    • Barbara Weeks
    • Art Millan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.6/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Morgan
    • Writer
      • Edward D. Wood Jr.
    • Stars
      • Jean Moorhead
      • Barbara Weeks
      • Art Millan
    • 53User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos34

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    Top cast13

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    Jean Moorhead
    Jean Moorhead
    • Paula Parkins
    Barbara Weeks
    Barbara Weeks
    • Jane Parkins
    Art Millan
    • Carl Parkins
    • (as Arthur Millan)
    Theresa Hancock
    • Georgia
    Joanne Cangi
    • Geraldine
    Gloria Farr
    • Phyllis
    Glen Corbett
    • Barney Stetson
    Lee Constant
    • Sheila
    I. Stanford Jolley
    I. Stanford Jolley
    • Judge Clara
    Timothy Farrell
    • Lt. Holmes
    • (as Timothy Farell)
    Chandler McClure
    • Det. Artman
    • (as F. Chan McClure)
    Bruno Metsa
    • Manny
    Harry Keaton
    Harry Keaton
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William Morgan
    • Writer
      • Edward D. Wood Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    3.61.9K
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    Featured reviews

    5HalRagland

    Proof You Don't Have To Be Ed Wood To Direct Badly

    I was concerned when I saw that "The Violent Years" was only written by Ed Wood, but was directed by William Morgan. I was concerned that it might come off as something other than an Ed Wood movie. Yet if you had to guess who directed this one without know anything about the movie, then I'm sure most b-movie lovers would guess it was Ed Wood.

    "The Violent Years" has everything you could want out of an Ed Wood directed and written movie. Bad dialogue, bad editing and ham acting plague "The Violent Years" as much as any other Ed Wood production.

    "The Violent Years" follows the exploits of a gang of four school girls led by the daughter of the local newspaper publisher. The "girls" all look like actresses who are closer to 30 than 20, but nobody should care since this is an Ed Wood written production. The girls get their thrills by staging armed robberies of gas stations and unarmed lover's lane couples. Along the way we get to see hilariously bad shoot out and crash scenes, an even more hilarious scene where the girls "rape" a man they discover making out with his girlfriend at the local lover's lane, and arguably the most hilarious monologue by a judge in film history.

    The aspect of an Ed Wood written film that provides me with the most amusement is the dialogue. Like the above mentioned monologue by the judge. No judge would write a decision in a court case like the one we hear in "The Violent Years", except if he were at least as drunk as Ed Wood was when he wrote it. People just don't talk like they do in an Ed Wood movie, and this has provided many an Ed Wood movie viewer with many laughs over the years.

    "The Violent Years" is there for the Ed Wood fan. It doesn't have much to offer to people who like to see good film making when they see a movie. However, if you're looking for an exercise in film making ineptitude for laughs, then "The Violent Years" is your movie.
    2Lechuguilla

    Ed Wood Strikes Again

    In what is yet another bad juvenile delinquent movie from the moralistic 1950s, four "teenage" girls rob a gas station, erase a classroom chalkboard, and do other vile things. The four females are all miscast. They're too old to be teenagers. The main "girl", Paula, is 18 years old. But the role is given to an "actress" who looks more like she's in her thirties.

    The film's sets are cheap looking. Dialogue is horrible. There's no subtext at all. Characters say exactly what they're thinking, which renders a production reminiscent of a high school play. Overall acting is amateurish. None of these people have any talent. They mouth the words without conviction or credibility. B&W lighting is conventional but tolerable.

    With speech after speech about right and wrong, the worst element of the film is the ending, as a judge hits us over the head with a moralistic sledgehammer. He starts out by blasting a teenager: "...this thrill seeking became the one great thing in your life, piling one thrill on another until, with ever increasing intensity, you became much like the drug addict, with his continual increases of dosage ..." As the actor playing the judge continually looks down at a paper, which is probably the film's script, he slogs on: "... to kill for the love of killing, to kill for a thrill". The judge's sermon to the teenager goes on for several more minutes.

    But the judge isn't through yet. Later, he gives another sermon, this time to the parents: "No child is inherently bad. He's made what he is by his upbringing and his surrounding. Adults create the world children live in". (I didn't know that! hehehehe) "And in this process, parents play the key role. When children grow up among adults who refuse to recognize anything that is fine and good or worthy of respect, it's no wonder that ..." Yawn! The film "credits" show that the infamous Ed Wood, Jr. was the scriptwriter. No wonder the script is horrible.

    There are unintentionally funnier films out there than "The Violent Years". But the film still provides a good lesson for young filmmakers about what to do, and especially what not to do, when making a cheap movie.
    3preppy-3

    Silly, funny and very very BAD!

    Incredibly dumb and utterly predictable story of a rich teen girl who, not given love by her parents, starts a girl gang. They rob gas stations, rape guys (!!!) and kill a policeman.

    All the "teenagers" in this film are easily in their late 20s/early 30s, the acting is all horrible and the script has every cliche imaginable with hilarious dialogue--it comes as no surprise that it was written by the immortal Ed Wood Jr.!

    Worth seeing for laughs. Best lines--"They're shooting back!" and "It ain't supposed to be like this."
    2bkoganbing

    Girls Going Wild

    Never let it be said that Ed Wood was afraid to tackle some burning social issues and he does so again here with his usual skill. The Violent Years talks about female delinquency as wealthy, but bored Jean Moorhead gathers around her some followers and they form a girl gang. These chicks are out for action and with them being masked, the law thinks that it's after your typical male holdup gang as the girls start going through all the local filling stations.

    But these brazen harlots don't stop there. Unmasked they terrorize couples in a frequented lover's lane and tie up the women and then force men to their sexual wills. I don't know about you, but that's normally the kind of thing that is not best done under pressure at the point of a gun.

    In the end Moorhead is pregnant and commits murder and the wages of sin are exacted by the long arm of the law in the person of noted character actor I. Stanford Jolley who looks like he's needing some laxative as he intones the sentence and his views on parents who do not give good supervision and values to their kids. Poor Jolley who is the only person in this cast who has a decent resume probably fired his agent after he signed him up for this.

    Ed Wood, they'll never be another like you.
    3gizmomogwai

    Ed Wood sure can write 'em, can't he?

    Proving Ed Wood can write just as well as he can direct, his script The Violent Years is brought to life by another director, and the result is still not good. The Violent Years comes out of an age-old theme that people mistakenly think is recent- "Today's kids are out of control and it wasn't like that when I was that age!" Except, people have been saying that forever. Check the date of the film- 1956, remembered now as a golden, Leave It to Beaver age. Like the later A Clockwork Orange, this has a gang of four teens robbing and raping- intriguingly, these four are all girls, which makes it harder to sympathize for the man who is raped- this is more male fantasy than horror.

    The film starts with the girl's parents up in front of a judge, who speaks about how hard it is to try a good friend. This is indeed hard, because judges can't do it at all- they have to recuse themselves. And since when can bad parenting be punished by the law? Much of what follows is ham-handed exploration of the kind of parenting that breeds delinquency- a mom who says her daughter's issues can't be all that important. And, skipping your kid's birthdays causes crime. The girls attempting to be bad leads to leaden dialogue and acting and cheesy lines. One woman needs to be told by the man that the girls are pointing guns at them, at which point the girls compliment him for being observant. The worst the woman who gives the gang its jobs can call the girls is "jerks."

    Of course, it all ends with more "If only I had..." mourning from the parents, reflecting a morality play with all the subtlety of being hit over the head with a hammer.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The four girls, who act like a violent gang of men, adopt male names: Paula is Paul, Geraldine is Gerry, Phyllis is Phil, and Georgia is George.
    • Goofs
      During the shootout from the classroom, it's nighttime. However, when the cops are shooting, it's daylight.
    • Quotes

      Detective: These aren't kids. These are morons!

    • Alternate versions
      Different versions of the film contain different opening credits. One opening has the credits play over a static shot of a city skyline, while in other prints the credits play over a nondescript background with the title card appearing over a cast photo.
    • Connections
      Edited into Sleazemania Strikes Back (1985)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1956 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Жестокие годы
    • Filming locations
      • 500 N Larchmont Blvd, Hancock Park, Los Angeles, California, USA(Rosewood Super Service Station robbery, demolished)
    • Production company
      • Dél Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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