Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA Georgia orphanage teenage boy gets involved with a chain-gang convict who is planning his escape from the nearby prison-camp.A Georgia orphanage teenage boy gets involved with a chain-gang convict who is planning his escape from the nearby prison-camp.A Georgia orphanage teenage boy gets involved with a chain-gang convict who is planning his escape from the nearby prison-camp.
Imágenes
Dolores Rosedale
- Mrs. Maureen Cole
- (as Roxanne)
Phillips Hamilton
- Whigs
- (sin acreditar)
Victor Johnson
- Hardhead
- (sin acreditar)
Joseph Killorin
- Solomon
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
10whpratt1
Have always been a great fan of Sal Mineo,( Les Henderson) who plays a great role in this film as an orphan in this school for boys who encounters some very dangerous men. Les's orphanage is located near a prisoner colony with harden criminals and he meets up with Rudy Krist, (James Whitmore) who becomes friendly with him and they both exchange words dealing about Les's great interest in boating. Les brings vegetables and fresh fruits to the guards and that is why Les is allowed to speak the the prisoners. Rudy is very interested in the boat that Les has because he finds this is a great way to escape from his captivity. However, there is a warden named Plug, (J. Carrol Naish) who runs this prison camp and he is rough and tough and will stop at nothing to kill anyone who tries to escape. This is a very interesting 1957 film in black and white and it is great to see such great veteran actors as J. Carrol Naish and James Whitmore give outstanding performances.
THE YOUNG DON'T CRY is an oddly inert vehicle for Sal Mineo, made to build on his Oscar-winning reputation after his memorable debut turn in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE. This black-and-white production sees him as an overaged kid at a home for orphaned children who gradually becomes involved in the lives and schemes of a bunch of chain gang prisoners digging ditches close to their school. Eventually, very eventually that is, there's a jailbreak of sorts and a little bit of action at the climax, but it's one of those films that feels lifeless and isn't even sure who the protagonist is. The best role goes to James Whitmore as a hardened criminal.
You're never sure what's really going on in "The Young Don't Cry", but there is enough symbolism to shake a stick at. Sensitive teenager Sal Mineo (as Leslie "Les" Henderson) walks softly on screen, carrying a big one (a stick, that is), and encounters a snake-in-the-grass. Fortunately, some work-released prisoners are digging a ditch nearby, and hard-nosed convict James Whitmore (as Rudy Krist) saves Mr. Mineo from being bitten by the rattlesnake. Mineo "bonds" with Mr. Whitmore immediately; their locking eyes are perhaps meant to convey, "You saved my life, I'm yours," since it doesn't look like, "I owe you one."
Later in the running time, Mineo gets a chance to "help" Whitmore - but, with decidedly different results...
Meanwhile, back at Georgia's "Brockton Orphanage for Boys", nice guy Mineo plays "big brother" to little Leland Mayforth (as Allan) and mixes it up with bully Paul Carr (as Tom Bradley). As it turns out, the stick Mineo was carrying in the opening was the mast of a boat he's been building. Later, Whitmore contemplates Mineo's ship for an escape attempt
The orphanage is excited by the arrival of former resident Gene Lyons (as Max Cole).
Mr. Lyons grew up to become a multi-millionaire; and, he also married whistle-inducing blonde Dolores "Roxanne" Rosedale (as Maureen). This makes Mr. Lyons a perfect role model for the "Brockton" orphans, especially manipulative Thomas A. Carlin (as Johnny Clancy). During Mr. Lyons' visit, young Carr's bullying "Bradley" steals the film, with a nicely performed outburst about some vaguely explained fishing trips. There are several other memorable performances, though. Writer Richard Jessup might have really had something, with this fine cast, had it been executed properly.
****** The Young Don't Cry (7/26/57) Alfred L. Werker ~ Sal Mineo, James Whitmore, Paul Carr, Thomas A. Carlin
Later in the running time, Mineo gets a chance to "help" Whitmore - but, with decidedly different results...
Meanwhile, back at Georgia's "Brockton Orphanage for Boys", nice guy Mineo plays "big brother" to little Leland Mayforth (as Allan) and mixes it up with bully Paul Carr (as Tom Bradley). As it turns out, the stick Mineo was carrying in the opening was the mast of a boat he's been building. Later, Whitmore contemplates Mineo's ship for an escape attempt
The orphanage is excited by the arrival of former resident Gene Lyons (as Max Cole).
Mr. Lyons grew up to become a multi-millionaire; and, he also married whistle-inducing blonde Dolores "Roxanne" Rosedale (as Maureen). This makes Mr. Lyons a perfect role model for the "Brockton" orphans, especially manipulative Thomas A. Carlin (as Johnny Clancy). During Mr. Lyons' visit, young Carr's bullying "Bradley" steals the film, with a nicely performed outburst about some vaguely explained fishing trips. There are several other memorable performances, though. Writer Richard Jessup might have really had something, with this fine cast, had it been executed properly.
****** The Young Don't Cry (7/26/57) Alfred L. Werker ~ Sal Mineo, James Whitmore, Paul Carr, Thomas A. Carlin
At an orphanage for boys and young men down in rural Georgia, a tough-yet-sensitive teen befriends a convict at a nearby work farm; when the prisoner eventually makes a break for it, causing all hell to break loose in the small community, the kid has to decide whether to talk his friend into giving up or aid in his escape. Slow, rather dreary co-feature from Columbia, ostensibly designed as a showcase for young star Sal Mineo, though James Whitmore's haunted con has the film's best moments. Connecting with the audience in a much more immediate way than his young co-star, brawny, masculine Whitmore understands how to make his character's fear and damage work best for him. The other story threads (a visiting former-orphan attempting to buy acceptance with his newfound wealth, a salty sheriff and his deputy, and a lonely woman living in a swampland shack) never quite come together, despite good actors and location shooting. It's a puzzling movie (a cynical viewer might even say a sexually conflicted one), with awkward melodrama and interaction ultimately keeping it from being anything more than second-string fare. ** from ****
The films of Alfred Werker are regularly overlooked but frequently reward attention.
Although dismissed by David Quinlan as "weak and woebegone" 'The Young Don't Cry' is actually a very respectable conclusion to his career on the big screen before he disappeared into television, showcasing Sal Mineo - who'd recently shown potential as Plato in 'Rebel without a Cause - with the help of veterans like the earlier film's cameraman Ernest Haller, composer George Anthiel and James Whitmore, J. Carroll Naish and octogenarian black actor Leigh Whipper whose career in films dated all the way back to Oscar Micheaux.
Although dismissed by David Quinlan as "weak and woebegone" 'The Young Don't Cry' is actually a very respectable conclusion to his career on the big screen before he disappeared into television, showcasing Sal Mineo - who'd recently shown potential as Plato in 'Rebel without a Cause - with the help of veterans like the earlier film's cameraman Ernest Haller, composer George Anthiel and James Whitmore, J. Carroll Naish and octogenarian black actor Leigh Whipper whose career in films dated all the way back to Oscar Micheaux.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe film was shot at a real orphanage, the Brockton Orphanage for Boys. The building is now Bethesda Academy, a boys' school.
- PifiasAt about 0:19:10, Johnny goes to leave the bathroom, he takes a step back and says "now don't blab this around...", as he says this his glasses completely disappear from his face. they appear in his hand and he then puts them on again.
- ConexionesFeatured in Death Scenes 2 (1992)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- The Cunning and the Haunted
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Savannah, Georgia, Estados Unidos(the Brockton Orphanage for Boys)
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 29 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was The Young Don't Cry (1957) officially released in India in English?
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