A teenage boy panics and takes hostages when he thinks he's committed murder.A teenage boy panics and takes hostages when he thinks he's committed murder.A teenage boy panics and takes hostages when he thinks he's committed murder.
Smoki Whitfield
- Sam
- (as Jordan 'Smoki' Whitfield)
Roger Corman
- Joe - TV Truck Man
- (uncredited)
Leo Gordon
- Man in Crowd
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis was Jack Nicholson's film debut.
- ConnectionsFeatured in My Man Adam (1985)
- SoundtracksCry Baby Cry
Written and sung by Dick Kallman
Liberty Recording Artist
Featured review
You'd know why you'd want to find this film, as it's the ultra-low budget, barely-a-drive-in quickie that features the great Jack Nicholson in his feature debut at the tender age of 21 (he was a mailman at MGM in his previous years in Hollywood). He plays a youth out of control, though also under duress. He's taken a woman and kid hostage, and outside the crowd builds in anticipation as the cops struggle to find a compromise to get everyone safely out. The film is complete with a theme song that just repeats 'cry-cry-cry, cry-baby killer', and in a style that is as polished as a junkyard dog. The story itself, by the way, is told in a way that is so simplistic and with over-acting (or maybe too trying-to-be-realistic acting) that is typical of this kind of un-pretentiously kind of fare. ''
But the reason in the end to reach into the recesses of ebay or elsewhere to find it is to see Nicholson in his early larval stage of a career, and somehow he does make the work fascinating to watch. Obviously not his best by a long-shot, and his first big break in the B-world would come later in Little Shop of Horrors and even later in Easy Rider. However I did like how he was keeping his scenes pretty well grounded, keeping to the situation at hand with all of the confusion and shattered rebellion that's in a youth of his real age. It's almost like checking out the Beatles when they were still the Quarry Men or something- it's not necessarily 'good', but you might be surprised at how it's not really bad either.
But the reason in the end to reach into the recesses of ebay or elsewhere to find it is to see Nicholson in his early larval stage of a career, and somehow he does make the work fascinating to watch. Obviously not his best by a long-shot, and his first big break in the B-world would come later in Little Shop of Horrors and even later in Easy Rider. However I did like how he was keeping his scenes pretty well grounded, keeping to the situation at hand with all of the confusion and shattered rebellion that's in a youth of his real age. It's almost like checking out the Beatles when they were still the Quarry Men or something- it's not necessarily 'good', but you might be surprised at how it's not really bad either.
- Quinoa1984
- Feb 28, 2006
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Schrei, Baby-Killer
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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