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Agrega una trama en tu idiomaHigh-school life and the prejudices and moral values of small-town USA during the 1950s.High-school life and the prejudices and moral values of small-town USA during the 1950s.High-school life and the prejudices and moral values of small-town USA during the 1950s.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Russ Bender
- Tom Mitchell
- (sin créditos)
Jack Chefe
- Man at Parents Night
- (sin créditos)
George DeNormand
- Man at Parents Night
- (sin créditos)
Bess Flowers
- Woman at Parents Night
- (sin créditos)
James Gonzalez
- Man at Parents Night
- (sin créditos)
Robert Haines
- Man at Parents Night
- (sin créditos)
Gary Vinson
- Bruce's Friend
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
John Saxon and Sandra Dee in all their 1958 youthful splendor explore teen sexuality and angst in Libertyville, USA.
Teresa Wright plays Dee's downtrodden, seamstress Mother living life as the town's neurotic spinster recluse, having once regrettably abandoned herself to a traveling trumpet player under the town's infamous bandstand, having later given birth to Dee as a result of her shameful tryst.
Hot Rods, hoop skirts, and gymnasium rock and roll abound, replete with alcoholic parents from both sides of the tracks fully represented. Luana Patten is wonderful as the snotty, slutty rich girl so accustomed to getting whatever she wants.
It's as cornball and cliche' as you can get, but good fun for a nostalgic look at small town Americana in the late 50's. You've seen Saxon and Dee much better than this, but it's remains a guilty pleasure to relish, particularly with Ross Hunter at the helm dishing up plenty of his particular style of small town pathos to keep you amused.
Look for Saxon's Pop (James Whitmore) near the end, driving off with the lovely Mrs. with a smile and a beer in his hand! Somehow, Toto, you know this kinda behavior tells us we're not in Kansas anymore.
Teresa Wright plays Dee's downtrodden, seamstress Mother living life as the town's neurotic spinster recluse, having once regrettably abandoned herself to a traveling trumpet player under the town's infamous bandstand, having later given birth to Dee as a result of her shameful tryst.
Hot Rods, hoop skirts, and gymnasium rock and roll abound, replete with alcoholic parents from both sides of the tracks fully represented. Luana Patten is wonderful as the snotty, slutty rich girl so accustomed to getting whatever she wants.
It's as cornball and cliche' as you can get, but good fun for a nostalgic look at small town Americana in the late 50's. You've seen Saxon and Dee much better than this, but it's remains a guilty pleasure to relish, particularly with Ross Hunter at the helm dishing up plenty of his particular style of small town pathos to keep you amused.
Look for Saxon's Pop (James Whitmore) near the end, driving off with the lovely Mrs. with a smile and a beer in his hand! Somehow, Toto, you know this kinda behavior tells us we're not in Kansas anymore.
Gay people could truly identify with the characters that John Saxon and Sandra Dee played here in this Ross Hunter soap opera. This is a story of kids who don't fit in with a small town and I never knew a gay person from a small town with one exception who couldn't wait to get out. These are indeed The Restless Years for our leads.
Teresa Wright is Sandra Dee's mother whose husband left her years ago and she's raised Dee by herself with all the gossiping mouths speculating what happened. Dee's considered illegitimate so the adults snub Wright. On the other hand the kids who are her peers consider her easy at least the males think so.
It was only natural that when James Whitmore who is an air conditioner salesman moves back with wife Margaret Lindsay and son Saxon that Dee and Saxon are drawn together. Saxon is a rebel type and not fitting in at all with the country club set of this town. But Whitmore who knows what public relations is in his job wants very much for Saxon to mix and mingle with the 'right' sort.
Both Dee and Saxon make an appealing pair and the adults in support are perfectly cast. You might also make note of former Disney star Luana Patten as a mean girl, Hayden Rorke and Dorothy Green as her dysfunctional parents and Jody McCrea as her jock boyfriend who picks a fight with Saxon and regrets it.
The Restless Years, a nice depiction of those bland Eisenhower years with an undercurrent of rebellion.
Teresa Wright is Sandra Dee's mother whose husband left her years ago and she's raised Dee by herself with all the gossiping mouths speculating what happened. Dee's considered illegitimate so the adults snub Wright. On the other hand the kids who are her peers consider her easy at least the males think so.
It was only natural that when James Whitmore who is an air conditioner salesman moves back with wife Margaret Lindsay and son Saxon that Dee and Saxon are drawn together. Saxon is a rebel type and not fitting in at all with the country club set of this town. But Whitmore who knows what public relations is in his job wants very much for Saxon to mix and mingle with the 'right' sort.
Both Dee and Saxon make an appealing pair and the adults in support are perfectly cast. You might also make note of former Disney star Luana Patten as a mean girl, Hayden Rorke and Dorothy Green as her dysfunctional parents and Jody McCrea as her jock boyfriend who picks a fight with Saxon and regrets it.
The Restless Years, a nice depiction of those bland Eisenhower years with an undercurrent of rebellion.
The year after the scandalous Peyton Place was made into a movie, a complete rip-off was released in the form of The Restless Years. If you like the genre of small town scandals, you can definitely check it out. It'll give you everything you're expecting: melodrama, teenage sexual angst, needless conflict, alcoholism, illegitimacy, secrets, and shame.
Teresa Wright plays the Lana Turner part to Sandra Dee's Diane Varsi. Teresa is very overprotective over her daughter, especially when it comes to boys. When Sandra wants to try out for the school play, will all the heightened dramatics corrupt her? John Saxon is the new boy in town, and his father James Whitmore wants him to become friends with the "right people" so he can become more successful in his business. John is far more interested in the scandal-tainted Sandra, even with her emotional problems that flare up whenever she's alone with him.
For die-hard fans of Peyton Place, this will come in a very distant second. If you don't really care about which story came first, and you just like juicy teen drama, you might really like this movie. It's extremely dated, but that can be part of the fun. If you like Sandra, she's very sweet and innocent in this movie. It's hard to imagine her ever growing up!
Teresa Wright plays the Lana Turner part to Sandra Dee's Diane Varsi. Teresa is very overprotective over her daughter, especially when it comes to boys. When Sandra wants to try out for the school play, will all the heightened dramatics corrupt her? John Saxon is the new boy in town, and his father James Whitmore wants him to become friends with the "right people" so he can become more successful in his business. John is far more interested in the scandal-tainted Sandra, even with her emotional problems that flare up whenever she's alone with him.
For die-hard fans of Peyton Place, this will come in a very distant second. If you don't really care about which story came first, and you just like juicy teen drama, you might really like this movie. It's extremely dated, but that can be part of the fun. If you like Sandra, she's very sweet and innocent in this movie. It's hard to imagine her ever growing up!
While the story centers around teenagers with a lot of nostalgia attached, it seems to depict small town living, at least that one, as unpleasant. My past experience is the opposite of that. One thing which raised my eyebrows a little is the mention of marijuana in this film about high school kids in 1958. I have never seen a teenage film from the 50s infer that kids used that stuff then, even though did it exist.
Of all the major Hollywood studios, Universal's vault is probably the one most filled with lost artifacts of the '50s and '60s. If it's shame that's keeping Universal from promoting DVD releases of their drive-in classics, they needn't be so worried; there's always appreciative audiences out there for angst-ridden teen tales and heavy-petters like "The Restless Years". Written by Edward Anhalt, an adaptation of the play "Teach Me How To Cry" by Patricia Joudry, and produced by no less than Ross Hunter, the picture stars Sandra Dee as a small town lass with a secret and a strange-acting mother, as well as a possible boyfriend in well-meaning John Saxon. Still quite young at this point, Saxon knows instinctively how to work his brooding handsomeness for effect (and it's refreshing to see him using it on a nice-guy role for a change and not as the villain of the piece). The story threads are dated, of course, but the look of the film and the tone are both intriguing. Still, the simplicity behind the melodramatics are no longer relevant, which makes the heated clinches all the more amusing. **1/2 from ****
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaSandra Dee's first leading role.
- ConexionesReferenced in The Beatles Anthology: July '40 to March '63 (1995)
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- How long is The Restless Years?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Restless Years
- Locaciones de filmación
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- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 26 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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