Would you admit to watching or owning this movie?
I will admit to having seen this movie and owning the blu ray. What about you?
shareI will admit to having seen this movie and owning the blu ray. What about you?
shareI'll admit to having seen it. It was about 1,000,000 years ago when I was on one of my many exploitation movie binges, possibly in a double-bill with Reefer Madness or The Terror of Tiny Town or Freaks or something like that. Wouldn't want to own any of those movies though. Wouldn't feel a need to watch any of them a second time.
But then, from what I gather, you're a bit of a collector, aren't you? So it makes sense you'd own these things... Slightly surprised it even made it to Blu-Ray though.
I'm definitely a collector. I have quite a few exploitation movies on blu ray, including Reefer Madness. I love Freaks, but don't own a copy of it (yet).
shareNever heard of it before but I found it on YouTube, skipped through it in a few minutes and I think that's enough.
shareWhy would it be embarrassing? I haven't seen it, but judging from the premise, it seems ahead of its time. Older dudes being with extremely younger women (especially underage) was common back then and I think it's great that a movie form the 30s called out the creepiness.
shareThe premise sounds ok ,
but the tagline makes it sound like the premise is a front for something unsavory
It is.
It's an exploitation movie disguised by the fig leaf of having an 'educational' message, which was a very common practice in the early Hays Code era. There are many such 'educational' movies. For obvious reasons, this is one of the more notorious and therefore a 'classic' of that strange little subgenre.