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Les Beatniks

Original title: The Beat Generation
  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
466
YOUR RATING
Mamie Van Doren in Les Beatniks (1959)
CrimeDramaThriller

A detective is assigned to track down and capture a crazed serial rapist.A detective is assigned to track down and capture a crazed serial rapist.A detective is assigned to track down and capture a crazed serial rapist.

  • Director
    • Charles F. Haas
  • Writers
    • Richard Matheson
    • Lewis Meltzer
  • Stars
    • Steve Cochran
    • Mamie Van Doren
    • Ray Danton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    466
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles F. Haas
    • Writers
      • Richard Matheson
      • Lewis Meltzer
    • Stars
      • Steve Cochran
      • Mamie Van Doren
      • Ray Danton
    • 22User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos21

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    Top cast47

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    Steve Cochran
    Steve Cochran
    • Dave Culloran
    Mamie Van Doren
    Mamie Van Doren
    • Georgia Altera
    Ray Danton
    Ray Danton
    • Stan Hess
    Fay Spain
    Fay Spain
    • Francee Culloran
    Louis Armstrong
    Louis Armstrong
    • Louis Armstrong
    Margaret Hayes
    Margaret Hayes
    • Joyce Greenfield
    • (as Maggie Hayes)
    Jackie Coogan
    Jackie Coogan
    • Jake Baron
    James Mitchum
    James Mitchum
    • Art Jester
    • (as Jim Mitchum)
    Cathy Crosby
    Cathy Crosby
    • The Singer
    Ray Anthony
    Ray Anthony
    • Harry Altera
    Dick Contino
    • Singing Beatnik
    Irish McCalla
    Irish McCalla
    • Marie Baron
    Maila Nurmi
    Maila Nurmi
    • The Poetess
    • (as Vampira)
    Billy Daniels
    Billy Daniels
    • Dr. Elcott
    Maxie Rosenbloom
    Maxie Rosenbloom
    • The Wrestling Beatnik
    Charles Chaplin Jr.
    Charles Chaplin Jr.
    • Lover Boy
    Norman Grabowski
    Norman Grabowski
    • The Beat Beatnik
    • (as Grabowski)
    Louis Armstrong and His Band
    Louis Armstrong and His Band
    • Louis Armstrong's Orchestra
    • (as Louis Armstrong and His All-Stars)
    • Director
      • Charles F. Haas
    • Writers
      • Richard Matheson
      • Lewis Meltzer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    5.5466
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    Featured reviews

    5moonspinner55

    "This world which is so real with all its sunsets and milky ways is nothing!"

    Clean-cut young man (in jackets and skinny ties) hangs out with the beatnik kids and plays the bongos, but really gets off on beating and sexually assaulting vulnerable housewives. Standard police thriller jazzed up with slang; it uses the beatnik milieu only as ruse, it's main aim being a marriage in crisis (the rapist targets a police detective's wife, and two months later she's pregnant but doesn't know who the father is). Low-budget potboiler from MGM was probably a second-biller, though it has gleaming black-and-white cinematography from Walter Castle and some good performances. Steve Cochran is perfectly cast as the detective with the hysterical wife, Ray Danton is way-gone-cool as the scuba-diving psychopath (his M.O. is to call on women pretending he owes their husbands money) and Mamie Van Doren is terrific as a soon-to-be divorcée who wouldn't mind being man-handled. Co-written by Richard Matheson (!) and Lewis Meltzer, the action gets too crazy, dig, near the finish, but for the most part it's a rough little jewel, dad. ** from ****
    7MartinTeller

    The Beat Generation (1959)

    An obsessed cop tries to track down the "Aspirin Kid," a beatnik serial rapist. MGM was not a noir studio, and I don't really know if you could call this noir but if it is, it's one of the most insane noirs I've ever seen. Like crazy, man. I hardly know where to begin. Dig this groovy cast, Daddy-O... Vampira, Mamie Van Doren (who steals the show) and real-life husband Ray Anthony, Charles Chaplin Jr., James Mitchum (a dead ringer for the old man), Jackie Coogan and performances by Cathy Crosby and Louis Armstrong. I think I can safely say it's the only noir that climaxes at a beat "hootenanny" where a guy randomly tries to wrestle the hero, who later chases the bad guy underwater while dodging harpoons. Yeah, this sh*t is nuts. The portrayal of beatniks is the standard Hollywood ridicule and parody. Has there ever been a positive image of beatniks in an American film? Even FUNNY FACE is pretty condescending. Steve Cochran (looking quite Clooney-esque at this stage in his career) is practically psychotic, setting up an interesting parallel with the villain (Ray Danton, turning the sleaze up to 11) as both are portrayed as misogynistic creeps. Being a late-period noir, there's more freedom to openly address subjects like rape and abortion. Although there is no graphic imagery, the screams of the victims are harrowing enough. The film is campy and trashy and yet also has a moral center... one which backfired for me when it came to the vile anti-choice message. It's hard to make a case against hatred towards women while also telling them they need to keep their rape-spawned babies. It was a pre-Roe v. Wade world, though. The Van Doren character sends mixed messages about the film's stance as well.

    This review is rambling because frankly, I don't know what to make of this movie. It's all over the place. In most respects it's pretty bad but also weirdly compelling, and sometimes even hilarious, whether intentionally or not. I can't honestly say I liked it, but I sure as hell couldn't stop watching it.
    Wizard-8

    Very uneven, but has some interesting aspects

    Like a few others have already stated in these user comments, it's kind of surprising that the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio of 1959 would get involved in a movie with a number of trashy elements. The movie has a number of flaws as well. The musical numbers seem out of place for a serious story, and there is also comedy relief that seems out of place. The movie is stretched out to the breaking point when a more compact telling was obviously needed. And the character of the rapist isn't really explored that well.

    Still, there are some interesting things to be found here. The movie explores some topics like rape and abortion with effectiveness that even more than 50 years later still seems a little daring. Also, Ray Danton, despite a weakly written character, acts in a really slimy way that makes him an effective villain. While this material isn't enough to make the movie worth searching for, if it happens to come on your TV, people interested in 50s movie exploitation that was done while still hampered by a production code may find the movie of some interest.
    8LeonLouisRicci

    "I don't need a Mother...I have been born."

    With no apologies to Jack Kerouac, this is an odd mix, to say the least. The title and the backdrop is a surreal, but stereotypical set-up with some Real Gone Cats looking drugged-out and oblivious to all except contemplating time and space. What goes on here is an Ed Wood like combination of some very odd bedfellows.

    The Beats are interesting with crazy mixed up stuff like Poetry Readings with white rats on the shoulder, sleazy, soft spasms of youthful Ecstasy, listening, on record, to what might now be called Industrial Music Samples, and an out of place Louis Armstrong on stage.

    There are some very strange, and for the time daring, sub-themes like Rape, Abortion, Serial Killers, and two Women Haters as the Leads. There is bizarre, incomprehensible stuff like a Wrestling Match (out of the blue), and an ending that takes place underwater with scuba gear (huh!).

    There is enough quirk here to fill three Movies and it is all fascinating to behold. An undeniable underground Classic that is marvelously mishandled and has more angles than a Picasso. It is all so gut-wrenchingly charming that it cannot be overlooked and is a great example of Hollywood with its most unflinching, insoluble, insights and misrepresentations that makes the jaw drop and the Brain boggle.
    5marlene_rantz

    Trashy, but interesting!

    I watched this movie with some hesitation, because it really received awful reviews; however, because I like Ray Danton and Steve Cochran, I decided to give it a chance. Ray Danton and Steve Cochran both gave very good performances, as did Mamie Van Doren, Fay Spain, Jackie Coogan, and Jim Mitchum, and the plot, though trashy, was interesting, and as pointed out by Martin Teller, this movie was weirdly compelling, mainly due, I think, to Ray Danton's very menacing and interesting performance as a killer, and Steve Cochran's performance as a complex cop. I am, therefore, recommending this movie, but only if you like any of the actors in it, since they all gave good performances, and, I think, one can bear with the worst movie if one is a fan of an actor!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      "On the Road" author Jack Kerouac was disturbed that his friend, author John Clellon Holmes, managed to get his "Beat Generation" novel "Go" into print before his own was published ("Go", in which Kerouac is a main character, was published in 1952, while "On the Road" was not published until 1957). Kerouac was worried that Holmes was plagiarizing him, although Holmes was careful to credit Kerouac with creating the term "Beat" for their generation, and much of the material was common among them and other writers of their circle, such as Allen Ginsberg. Ironically, producer Albert Zugsmith outfoxed Kerouac by copyrighting the term "The Beat Generation", which he used as the title of this egregious exploitation film, which was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1959. A year later, M.G.M. released a film of Kerouac's novel "The Subterraneans", made by with top talent: It proved to be a major disappointment as it grossly misrepresented the scene (as well as Kerouac's novel). Ironically, "The Subterraneans" probably is the premier contemporary movie about the Beats, as so few "Beat" movies were made (until Sur la route (2012)), the phenomenon occurring during a time of strict screen censorship in the United States. By the time censorship was lifted in 1967, the Beats had been supplanted by the Hippies.
    • Quotes

      Georgia Altera: Would you rather be dead with him or alive with me?

    • Connections
      Featured in Vampira and Me (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Headed for the Blues
      (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Lewis Meltzer

      Music by Albert Glasser

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 19, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Beat Generation
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Albert Zugsmith Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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