BY ERNIE MAGNOTTA
Plan 9 from Outer
Space. Bride of the Monster. Glen or Glenda. You know the movie titles. And you
know the man responsible for them: the legendary Ed Wood, who has been severely
ridiculed by some, but revered by many others. I’m certainly not going to say
that his films are masterpieces, but I do like and respect them. I also think
that they have their own point of view, are far from being bad and that they
deserve to be remembered. That’s why I’m thrilled to be reviewing the Blu-ray
release of the Ed Wood-scripted, juvenile delinquent classic The Violent Years.
Directed by William Morgan and originally
titled Teenage Girl Gang, The Violent Years follows spoiled rich
kid Paula Parkins and her all-girl gang as they run wild through their city
vandalizing high schools, ripping off gas stations, sexually assaulting young
men, and eventually murdering a few people. Can they keep up this reign of
terror or will the authorities find a way to stop their rampage once and for
all?
I wouldn’t say that The Violent Years is as good as the Ed Wood films I mentioned
earlier (probably because Ed didn’t direct this one), but it’s certainly
entertaining and definitely worth a look. However, the idea that, due to her
loving parents working a bit more than they should, Paula would become
completely unfeeling and go on a bunch of crime sprees which culminate in
several cold-blooded murders is pretty far-fetched. But what we mainly have
here is a wonderful combination of 1950s time capsule and plenty of
unintentional hilarity. For example, we are treated to pajama-clad teenage guys
who are clearly 35-year-old actors; not to mention priceless Ed Wood dialogue
such as, while attempting to figure out where they went wrong with Paula, her
mother saying to her husband, “We gave her a new dress instead of a caress.†We
also have a court judge who gives a moralistic speech thath seems to never end.
Still, even without the unintended humor, the movie keeps you somewhat
interested, has a semi-engaging lead (1955 Playboy Playmate Jean Moorhead as
Paula), a catchy musical score and, being that it clocks in at only 57 minutes,
moves along pretty quickly.
The Violent Years has been released on
Blu-ray by two of my favorite companies: Something Weird Video and AGFA
(American Genre Film Archive). The disc is region free and the movie is
presented in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio. The images are extremely clear
making the film, which has been scanned in 4K from the original 35mm camera
negative, look better than you’ve ever seen it before. The disc is also jammed
with special features which makes this a terrific Blu-ray collection. Besides
the original theatrical trailer, we have fifteen minutes of Gutter-Noir
trailers. We are also treated to ten minutes of previously unseen footage from
a juvenile delinquent flick which Ed never completed as well as a very humorous
and informative audio commentary by legendary exploitation filmmaker Frank
Henenlotter (Basket Case, Brain Damage,
Frankenhooker) and Ed Wood biographer Rudolph Grey. And that’s not all. Not
only does this Blu-ray come with a memorabilia scrapbook containing wonderful
gems such as rare photos and the theatrical trailer’s shooting script, but it
also comes with a 2nd feature! It’s another Ed Wood (co-)scripted
film from 1961 called Anatomy of a Psycho
which was scanned in 2K from an original 35mm theatrical print and is presented
in its original 1.85:1 aspect ratio. Recommended.
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(Ernie Magnotta is the author of "Halloween: The Changing Shape of an Iconic Series"). Click here to order from Amazon.)