The filmed depiction of a program where convicts tell troubled kids about the horrors of prison life.The filmed depiction of a program where convicts tell troubled kids about the horrors of prison life.The filmed depiction of a program where convicts tell troubled kids about the horrors of prison life.
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I first saw this nearly five years ago as a high school freshman, in health class. The experience was absolutely riveting, and as has already been pointed out, there's a brutal honesty in this film that simply doesn't come from a screenplay.
While this film is over two decades old, that in no way lessens its impact. With talk-shows now blindly bombarding us with images of indignant, lawless teenagers and trying to dispel the situation with pop psychologists and boot camps, the "Scared Straight!" program looks all the more effective.
This is definitely not one to miss.
While this film is over two decades old, that in no way lessens its impact. With talk-shows now blindly bombarding us with images of indignant, lawless teenagers and trying to dispel the situation with pop psychologists and boot camps, the "Scared Straight!" program looks all the more effective.
This is definitely not one to miss.
This became one of the most legendary documentaries ever made. I rented the video once and taped the show when it came on tv. Even though this film was made a quarter century ago, its effect is still as powerful and its message still as important. I have always supported programs like Scared Straight because there are some kids who don't respond to kindness. To all those bleeding heart people who think these convicts were so mean to these kids, just remember they didn't get there for being boy scouts. Good kids don't go into someone's prison. One of the lifers told the group that if someone had talked to him like that he wouldn't be in prison. Another lifer tells the group that the police can make a thousand mistakes but you can only make one. The speaker that scared the kids the most was this one guy named Ali. He had a loud screeching voice and seemed the most angry of the convicts. He told the kids "I'm here for murder, kidnapping, armed robbery...". He showed them his eye was missing, taken right out of its socket in a prison fight. I feel the convicts "in your face" approach was the right thing to do. They had experimented before with a kinder gentler approach, and guess what folks it didn't work! The kids actually wanted to go back to the prison because they thought that the convicts were a nice bunch of guys! I watched interviews they did with those kids before they went into Rahway and I wanted to slap the snot out of some of them at the things they were saying. I was thinking to myself, what a bunch of punks! I'll tell you this, they didn't act like that after it was all over. In 1998, they did a follow up special called Scared Straight Twenty Years Later. Danny Glover was the host of it. It profiled the kids and the convicts. Only two of the group that went to Rahway for the documentary became career criminals. One was in prison and one had died. The others were useful and productive members of society. None were rocket scientists, they had mostly blue collar jobs, but the point is they had lived honest lives and all of them talked of how greatful they were for the program and what it did for them. Three of the lifers had died (one of natural causes, one of AIDS and one of an overdose). Two of them were still in prison and the rest had been released and had lived honestly since. The one with the missing eye was so different. They interviewed him and he seemed like such a nice old guy. He had a beautiful family and said he had everything he wanted and that he loved himself. It was wonderful to see.
A documentary that you will never forget once you see it, Scared Straight ought to be required viewing in every high school. As narrator Peter Falk points outs at the being of the film, it at first seems too good to be true that three hours in prison will make young trouble makers change their ways, but the subsequent prison visit shows that it is possible to change young lives in such a short time. The confrontation between the inmates and kids is riveting; you hang on to every word, and feel the tension in the room even while watching it on video. The change in the kids sent on the prison visit is astonishing, as shown in the interviews taped before and after the trip to Rahway. Before the trip, the kids all brag about their crimes and think they will never get caught; the interviews taken after the prison visit shows how effective the program was for each of them. Scared Straight is a powerful film; the setting and language will be offensive to some, but it is exactly those elements which make it such a forceful production. Though made back in the 1970s, it is still important and timely viewing.
This is the kind of frank, brutal, and explicit commentary that you simply cannot find in a "prison" movie. The interaction between the "Lifers" (inmates who have been committed to life sentences, and perform an outreach service to children at risk) and the potentially felonious kids is extremely powerful. After watching, you have to wonder why there isn't a program like this in every city in every state in every country. Forget about any fictional account of prison life that you've ever seen - Scared Straight is the real deal, and one you won't soon forget.
10SeanWiz
I hope that every punk there is on this world gets a chance to see this film. This was my third time watching it, and I still find myself imagining being locked up for just one day, and how that would feel. This movie serves as an excellent eye openner for a lot of kids who are having troubles with the law at a young age.
Did you know
- TriviaThis documentary was broadcast uncensored when aired on television in the late 1970s. For many commercial broadcasters, this was the first time the f-word was willingly allowed on television.
- Quotes
Convict: You know if you get up and touch one of them shoes, I'm gonna break my leg off in your ass.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Scared Straight! 20 Years Later (1999)
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