From his prison cell, young Alan Musgrave relates his experiences of the previous year dedicated to fulfilling every whim of beautiful and self-absorbed high school senior Barbara Ann Greene.
Roddy McDowall
Alan Musgrave
Tuesday Weld
Barbara Ann Greene
Lola Albright
Marie Greene
Martin West
Bob Bernard
Ruth Gordon
Stella Bernard
Harvey Korman
Weldon Emmett
Sarah Marshall
Miss Schwartz
Lynn Carey
Sally Grace
Donald Murphy
Phil Neuhauser
Max Showalter
Howard Greene
Joseph Mell
Dr. Milton Lippman (as Joe Mell)
Dan Frazer
Honest Joe
Martine Bartlett
Inez
Jo Collins
Kitten
Judith Loomis
Butch Neuhauser
David Draper
Billy Gibbons
Peter Adams
Frank (uncredited)
Martin Gabel
T. Harrison "Harry" Belmont (uncredited)
Director, Writer
George Axelrod
Novel
Al Hine
Writer
Larry H. Johnson
June 10, 2015
The early nineteen sixties were the great age of black comic satire in American cinema. Everyone remembers Doctor Strangelove and The Nutty Professor and Lolita and One Two Three and The Loved One.In a sense, this neglected masterpiece was the culmination. Even though Axelrod wasn't a genius like Kubrick or Wilder, this film hits its target just as unerringly. Think of it as a darker, much more savage Rushmore, in which almost all the false Gods of our civilization - phony preachers, psychoanalysis, public "education",consumerism, youth 'culture',- are weighed in the scales and found wanting. Roddy Mcdowall and Tuesday Weld give two of the great comic perfomances. Indeed, Mcdowall is inspirational to any would-be anarchist. Should be seen - and discussed - more often. Scorsese once listed this film among his "guilty pleasures": He has nothing to be guilty about-this is wonderful
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00