Lt. Lacey heads a crackdown on dope-peddling to high-school athletes. One dies from an overdose, two more kill a gas-station attendant in a holdup attempt, and another dies in a condemned em... Read allLt. Lacey heads a crackdown on dope-peddling to high-school athletes. One dies from an overdose, two more kill a gas-station attendant in a holdup attempt, and another dies in a condemned empty building while fleeing from the law.Lt. Lacey heads a crackdown on dope-peddling to high-school athletes. One dies from an overdose, two more kill a gas-station attendant in a holdup attempt, and another dies in a condemned empty building while fleeing from the law.
- Anderson
- (as Alex Wells)
- Reagan
- (as Michael Henry)
- School Principal
- (as Byron Folger)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
All in all this is an interesting look into the culture and morals of the fifities. At worst the movie is terrible. At best it is dated and quaint. Not a totlal waste of time.
This is a very uneven movie. On one hand, the excellent and under-appreciated actor Paul Kelly is in the film and, as usual, he does a good job--playing a strong-jawed detective in the Narcotics Unit. Also, the film has a lot of realism and a grittiness that I liked--making it seem like a cheap Film Noir movie. However, the film also has a lot of bad. The acting and dialog of many of the teenagers in the film is just terrible. Poor delivery, occasionally dumb characters (such as the guardian who is totally clueless) and wooden acting all the way. I think the good outweighs the bad, though, as the overall package isn't bad despite a very, very low budget and a lot of amateur actors. Sort of like a poor man's "Dragnet".
It's another of the long string of exploitation movies, telling the audience how bad the dope trade is, and it certainly doesn't glamorize this tale of a nice boy (Cullen Wheelas) who meets a cute girl from the wrong side of the tracks and invites her to a party at his house. Eventually the cops get involved, and can they do anything about narcotics, which leads into another spate of exposition.
Just when I thought it was going to be like that to the end, with seven minutes to run, the talking stopped and there was about five minutes of almost pure actin, well performed and edited. Then we had the closing narration....
There are some good, if low-pay performers here, including Byron Flouger, Regis Toomey, and Cathy Downs.
I rate the script generally run of the mill for a docu noir but, that said, it certainly remained interesting enough that I would not stop watching it. Though I do not so much as smoke a normal cigarette - and have had but two or three in all my 65 years on this planet - I could not stop watching this police account of naissant drug addiction in the USA, and how the law tried to deal with it. Of course, since 1957 - when CURFEW BREAKERS was made, 65 years ago - the narcotics problem has increased exponentially, and now rates a major international market, with countries in South America and Asia treating it as a major source of revenue, and often the only commodity that will earn them foreign currency.
It is a sad finding that the persons who made this well-intentioned film that has the merit of warning youngsters about the evils of addiction, and parents of the tell tale signs in their children, 65 years on we find this burgeoning problem grow daily in pretty much all countries, with the attendant rippling effects on hard crime, money laundering, corruption, theft, and many other ramifications.
Ultimately, CURFEW BREAKERS rates far from memorable and suffers from many amateurish scenes but it is a warning as to how kids, then beginning to experience rock & roll, twist, and other off the beaten track, often viewed as rebellious, musical and other new trends, could not use highly rated human intelligence to curb this curse.
The wrapup ending left me mulling over the fact great technological gains permitting ever easier communication among humans have also helped spread narcotics addiction as a social disease. We, humans, are not as clever as we crack ourselves up to be.
Did you know
- GoofsChase scene and its aftermath alternate between day and night.
- Quotes
Julie Barnes: Oh, gee, thanks Dick, but I'm afraid those kids will probably think I'm a square.
- ConnectionsEdited into Sleazemania! (1985)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Hooked
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1