Untamed Youth is a 1957 American teen film directed by Howard W. Koch, written by John C. Higgins and Stephen Longstreet, and starring Mamie Van Doren and Lori Nelson as two starstruck sisters who are sentenced to farm labor.
Untamed Youth | |
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Directed by | Howard W. Koch |
Written by |
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Produced by | Aubrey Schenck |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Carl E. Guthrie |
Edited by | John F. Schreyer |
Music by | Les Baxter |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
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Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
editSisters Penny and Jane Lowe are arrested for hitchhiking and skinny-dipping and are sentenced to work on a rural Texas farm for a corrupt agricultural magnate named Russ Tropp. The judge, who sentenced the sisters to the farm, is secretly married to Tropp. Unaware she is being used for her position, she is likewise unaware of the mistreatment of the prisoners. When her son is hired to work at the farm, he uncovers that a scam had been going on. Through dating the judge, Tropp ensures that all delinquents and rule breakers are ordered to work off their sentence at his farm, therefore giving him a stable amount of cheap labor and allowing him to undercut all competition he faces. The judge's son falls in love with Jane, while Penny, who performs four songs in the film, dreams of making it big in show business. One of the girls, named Baby, at one point falls ill, leaving the judge's son to hijack one of Tropp's cars to rush her to a hospital for treatment. Baby dies from internal hemorrhaging caused by a miscarriage.
Cast
edit- Mamie Van Doren as Penny Lowe
- Lori Nelson as Jane Lowe
- John Russell as Russ Tropp
- Don Burnett as Bob Steele
- Glenn Dixon as Jack Landis
- Lurene Tuttle as Judge Cecilia Steele Tropp
- Eddie Cochran as Bong
- Yvonne Fedderson as Baby
- Jeanne Carmen as Lillibet
- Robert Foulk as Sheriff Mitch Bowers
- Wayne Taylor as Duke
- Jered Barclay as Ralph
- Valerie Reynolds as Arkie
- Lucita as Margaritia
- Matt Malinowski as Hair
Critical reception
editAccording to a contemporary review for The New York Times, the film was "a mélange of mediocre melodrama" that sought to "portray sisters who run afoul of the law and are sent to a prison farm populated almost entirely by rock 'n' roll addicts...Call it a fate almost worse than death," and noted that "the amazingly endowed Miss Van Doren [...] renders a variety of torrid gyrations that are guaranteed to keep any red-blooded American boy awake. Nothing else in this picture can make that claim.[1] Film critic Glenn Erickson wrote on DVD Talk that the film was "prime camp Juvenile Delinquency material -- with musical numbers! -- that veers between laughable dramatics and pure 50s exploitation," that the characters "both male and female alike are stereotyped," that Van Doren "is unconvincing in almost every scene," "bounces merrily whenever she walks" and that her dancing is "straight from the burlesque stage," and noted the "stultifying finale."[2] A review of the film by critic Hal Erickson on AllMovie described it as "a camp classic, so stupefyingly awful that it's actually festive," and noted that "to repeat examples of the film's howlingly bad dialogue would be to rob the viewer of the perverse pleasure of experiencing Untamed Youth in all its trashy glory."[3]
Legacy
editThe film was featured on an early episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, and an updated livestream version in 2021 during Joel Hodgson's Make More MST3K campaign on Kickstarter.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Untamed Youth' Full of Rock'n' Roll." New York Times. (May 11, 1957).
- ^ Erickson, Glenn (December 27, 2009). "Untamed Youth - Warner Archive Collection". DVD Talk. DVDTalk.com. Retrieved March 20, 2024.
- ^ Erickson, Hal. "Untamed Youth (1957)". AllMovie. Netaktion LLC. Retrieved March 20, 2024.
- ^ #MakeMoreMST3K Livestream II: UNTAMED YOUTH!, archived from the original on December 15, 2021, retrieved April 30, 2021