


If you ever wanted to know what happened to Rhoda Penmark after The Bad Seed sprouted and hit high school, you might want to check out Maury Dexter’s Born Wild — a/k/a The Young Animals. Here, Patty McCormack plays the good girl this time, stuck in the middle of brewing racial tensions at a Arizona high school, where psychedelic rumbles are the norm, baby! As for our follow up feature, The Young, the Evil and the Savage — a/k/a Naked You Die a/k/a The Mini-Skirt Murders — we have a delightful whodunit courtesy of two of my favorite Italian filmmakers, Antonio Margheriti and Mario Bava, where an all-girl school comes down with a bad case of unknown killerittis, who’s stalking the halls, wreaking havoc, and leaving a trail of perky student-bodies in his bloody wake.
Born Wild (1968) American International / P: Maury Dexter / AP: Hank Tani / D: Maury Dexter / W: James Gordon White / C: Kenneth Peach / E: Sidney Levin / M: Les Baxter / S: Tom Nardini, Patty McCormack, Joanna Frank, David Macklin, Russ Bender
The Young, The Evil and The Savage (1968) BGA :: Super International Pictures :: Woolner Brothers Pictures Inc. :: American International / P: Virgilio De Blasi, Lawrence Woolner / D: Antonio Margheriti / W: Franco Bottari, Antonio Margheriti, Giovanni Simonelli, Mario Bava / C: Fausto Zuccoli / E: Otello Colangeli / M: Carlo Savina / S: Mark Damon, Eleonora Brown, Michael Rennie, Sally Smith, Patrizia Valturri, Luciano Pigozzi
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This entry was posted on February 6, 2013 at 2:51 am and is filed under 1960-1969, Movie Ads with tags American International, Antonio Margheriti, Born Wild, Eleonora Brown, Gialli, Italian Imports, Joanna Frank, Juvenile Delinquents, Lawrence Woolner, Luciano Pigozzi, Mario Bava, Mark Damon, Maury Dexter, Michael Rennie, Mystery, Patty McCormack, Psychos / Slashers, Russ Bender, Social Commentary, The Young the Evil and the Savage, Tom Nardini, Woolner Brothers. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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Slaves to Their Own Strange Desires! What One Won’t Do, the Other Will! (January, 1969)
If you ever wanted to know what happened to Rhoda Penmark after The Bad Seed sprouted and hit high school, you might want to check out Maury Dexter’s Born Wild — a/k/a The Young Animals. Here, Patty McCormack plays the good girl this time, stuck in the middle of brewing racial tensions at a Arizona high school, where psychedelic rumbles are the norm, baby! As for our follow up feature, The Young, the Evil and the Savage — a/k/a Naked You Die a/k/a The Mini-Skirt Murders — we have a delightful whodunit courtesy of two of my favorite Italian filmmakers, Antonio Margheriti and Mario Bava, where an all-girl school comes down with a bad case of unknown killerittis, who’s stalking the halls, wreaking havoc, and leaving a trail of perky student-bodies in his bloody wake.
Born Wild (1968) American International / P: Maury Dexter / AP: Hank Tani / D: Maury Dexter / W: James Gordon White / C: Kenneth Peach / E: Sidney Levin / M: Les Baxter / S: Tom Nardini, Patty McCormack, Joanna Frank, David Macklin, Russ Bender
The Young, The Evil and The Savage (1968) BGA :: Super International Pictures :: Woolner Brothers Pictures Inc. :: American International / P: Virgilio De Blasi, Lawrence Woolner / D: Antonio Margheriti / W: Franco Bottari, Antonio Margheriti, Giovanni Simonelli, Mario Bava / C: Fausto Zuccoli / E: Otello Colangeli / M: Carlo Savina / S: Mark Damon, Eleonora Brown, Michael Rennie, Sally Smith, Patrizia Valturri, Luciano Pigozzi
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This entry was posted on February 6, 2013 at 2:51 am and is filed under 1960-1969, Movie Ads with tags American International, Antonio Margheriti, Born Wild, Eleonora Brown, Gialli, Italian Imports, Joanna Frank, Juvenile Delinquents, Lawrence Woolner, Luciano Pigozzi, Mario Bava, Mark Damon, Maury Dexter, Michael Rennie, Mystery, Patty McCormack, Psychos / Slashers, Russ Bender, Social Commentary, The Young the Evil and the Savage, Tom Nardini, Woolner Brothers. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.