IMDb RATING
5.6/10
328
YOUR RATING
In this dark vision of drug use, a former classmate turned dealer seduces a high-school student into drug addiction.In this dark vision of drug use, a former classmate turned dealer seduces a high-school student into drug addiction.In this dark vision of drug use, a former classmate turned dealer seduces a high-school student into drug addiction.
Julie Conners
- Helen
- (as Julie Connors)
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Wow, this was dated even when it came out. Not so much over the top like reefer madness, but more like the incessant lecturing that you saw in the worst Dragnet episodes from the 1960s. It appears to be made in 1967 but it has the look of boys and girls a few years earlier. The party scenes are hilarious. I assume these types of films were shown in schools, although I was in middle school in 1967, and never saw this. What a difference in 55 years. Now we have crack and legalized pot. I saw this on TCM. I wonder what the cast thinks of this film, seeing it today. I would like to see this done by Rifftrax.
Fairly good educational short showing the evils of drug addiction. It's all narrated--you never hear the actors peak.
It deals with high school student John Scott who's failing academically and is worried that his low marks will have him kicked off the track team. Then he meets former schoolmate Pete who (unknown to John) has spent some time in jail for pushing drugs. Pete sees a new victim in John. He invites him to party and gets him started on the path of addiction. He buys the drugs for him and soon John is an addict. Then Pete stops buying the drugs for John and John must do anything to pay for them.
It's fairly tame by today's standards and a little dated but still works. There's a genuinely harrowing sequence where we see John going through withdrawal and we see another addict shooting up. Surprisingly the happy ending you expect doesn't happen. It's a realistic ending but a downer. Well-made and interesting.
It deals with high school student John Scott who's failing academically and is worried that his low marks will have him kicked off the track team. Then he meets former schoolmate Pete who (unknown to John) has spent some time in jail for pushing drugs. Pete sees a new victim in John. He invites him to party and gets him started on the path of addiction. He buys the drugs for him and soon John is an addict. Then Pete stops buying the drugs for John and John must do anything to pay for them.
It's fairly tame by today's standards and a little dated but still works. There's a genuinely harrowing sequence where we see John going through withdrawal and we see another addict shooting up. Surprisingly the happy ending you expect doesn't happen. It's a realistic ending but a downer. Well-made and interesting.
I don't care what anyone says. I dig this stuff. Not so much a full-fledged movie. Just 30 minutes of unintentional humor, with an agenda. Just one more reason to buy Blood Freak on DVD, from Something Weird Video. And believe me, there's a lot of them. The perfect extra for said DVD, considering the content and all. So, anyway. The agenda of these short films of the 50's and 60's is to attempt (in vain) to scare the youth of the day into staying away from the more harmful drugs, such as heroin, and, well... Pot, I guess. And how they usually went about this is, of course, the humorous part. Or at least it is, considering how hip and ironic everyone has become since this era. Pit Of Despair is a perfect example of these corny warnings. Follows the downward spiral of a straight-laced highschool student, who at first, takes some bennys in order to deal with the normal pressures of school. Soon, frustration and peer-pressure "forces" a once hopeful young fellow into trying the pot. And can anyone guess what the pot leads to? That's right, class. An agonizing existence, filled with nothing but needles and cold turkeys. A disturbing scenario, to say the least. Really makes one think twice before trying the pot, although, the guy started out taking bennys. Maybe those things are the real gateway drug. Anyone even know what bennys are? Nevermind. As far as this type of short film goes, this one is by far the most entertaining one I've seen, even if the only dialog is a voice-over. Narcotics: Pit Of Despair is definitely worth more than one viewing, and despite how ridiculous it is, it's still accurate in its own way. although, for a much more realistic, dare I say sobering portrayal of what drugs can really do to a person, I would recommend you take a look at Blood Freak.
10decodude
The grainy 16-mm print only adds to the raw starkness of this powerful narrated educational film that was shown to schoolkids from 1967 through about 1970. Considered "dated" by contemporary standards, although some very graphic and disturbing scenes can still make one grimace even today. One especially stomach-turning scene of the young heroin addict played by Kevin Tighe rolling in withdrawal agony on a dirty bed in a squalid room. This extremely obscure movie, although dated, should still be shown in schools today, in this author's opinion. Four Stars.
This is a scared straight educational film directed at high school teens. John Scott (Kevin Tighe) is a clean cut all-American student. He's under pressure with his academics and his athletics. He runs into old classmate Pete who turns out to be a drug pusher. Of course, the gateway drug is the devil's weed and John is forced to partake due to peer pressure.
Tighe is a Hollywood veteran and it's interesting to see him as a young man doing young acting. This is pure old style anti-drug educational film. It is everything wrong with this type of movies with its old man narration and old world thinking. This is a great example of the pure stuff.
Tighe is a Hollywood veteran and it's interesting to see him as a young man doing young acting. This is pure old style anti-drug educational film. It is everything wrong with this type of movies with its old man narration and old world thinking. This is a great example of the pure stuff.
Did you know
- TriviaFilm debut of Kevin Tighe.
- GoofsThe narrator states that before the last exam, John "took a couple of bennies to pep him up, but so what? Everybody knows a couple can't do any harm." The narrator then says John should've known that barbiturates are dangerous to his nervous system. But the term "bennies" refers to Benzedrine, an amphetamine/stimulant used for staying awake. It does not refer to barbiturates, which are sedating.
- Crazy creditsThe ending title card displays: "There is no end".
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dope Mania (1987)
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