Date Bait


1960

Brief Synopsis

At Pancho's, a teenage hangout, Brad Martinelli, a drug addict who has just returned to town, aggressively approaches Sue Randall, jealous that she prefers Danny Logan to him. When Danny asks Brad to leave Sue alone, then sympathetically says that everyone feels sorry for him, Brad erupts in anger ...

Film Details

Release Date
Nov 1960
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Marathon Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
The Filmgroup, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Missouri, Chillicothe, United States

Technical Specs

Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

At Pancho's, a teenage hangout, Brad Martinelli, a drug addict who has just returned to town, aggressively approaches Sue Randall, jealous that she prefers Danny Logan to him. When Danny asks Brad to leave Sue alone, then sympathetically says that everyone feels sorry for him, Brad erupts in anger and pulls a knife on Danny. Just then, Brad's older brother, drug dealer Nico, arrives and convinces Brad to leave, saying that he does not want Brad to "get sick" again and promising to "take care" of Danny. Later, when Danny kisses Sue goodnight in front of her parent's house, Brad secretly observes them. After Danny drives away, he is followed by Nico, who pursues Danny in a high-speed chase, eventually forcing him off the road. Nico then gives Danny a beating, warning him not to cause Brad any more trouble. The next morning, Danny's older brother, with whom Danny has lived since their parents died, callously dismisses Danny's facial bruises and tells him to start acting like a man. Later, when Danny drives to Sue's house to pick her up for a party at the lake, her father, who has been berating Sue because Danny is not of their class, sees the bruises and, thinking they prove that Danny is no good, orders him away. At the lake, Danny meets friends Frida Porter and Slats but is too depressed to join the party. When Sue, who has sneaked out of the house, arrives, Danny tells her he does not blame her father for being protective and decides to try to talk to him. The next day, while Nico is assigning Brad a job to deliver drugs, Danny goes to Sue's father's office. Although he tries to convince Randall that he and Sue are in love, Danny makes matters worse by saying that they will both work after high school to help pay for his college education. Randall refuses to hear of his daughter working and tells Danny to stay away from her or he will take legal action. That afternoon, Sue again meets Danny, Frida and Slats at the lake. When Danny says that perhaps Randall is right about him, Sue suggests that if they get married right away, it would convince her father that they are serious. Although initially reluctant, Danny agrees, and they make plans to elope to Las Vegas that night and lie about their ages. While Frida, Slats and Danny go back to town, Brad sees Sue waiting by the lake and tries to convince her that they belong together. Just as he says "If I can't have you," Danny, who has just returned, interrupts and again fights with Brad, who leaves as Frida and Slats return with Sue's suitcase. That evening, Nico sees his customer, Freddy, in a bar and threatens him because he has not been paid for the three packages of drugs. The nervous Freddy says that he received only two packages from Brad and begs for more time, but Nico replies that tomorrow night Freddy must give him all of the money or the three packages. Meanwhile, Danny and Sue have gotten married in Las Vegas after Frida convinced Sue's parents that she was spending the night with her. Following an evening of dancing, they rent a motel room and nervously spend their first night together as a married couple. At Pancho's, Nico and his cohort come looking for Danny because of the thrashing he gave Brad at the lake. When Slats and Frida refuse to say where Danny is, Brad beats Slats, prompting the hysterical Frida to reveal that Danny and Sue have gone to Las Vegas to get married. The next morning, when Sue and Danny return to town, they meet Frida and Slats at Pancho's. Slats does not reveal that Frida told Nico where they were the previous night and offers to buy them dinner if Frida again can provide Sue with an alibi. Sue then kisses Danny goodbye and hides her wedding ring on a neck chain. That night, Brad, who learned about the wedding from Nico, anonymously calls the Randalls to tell them that Sue spent the previous night with Danny. The Randalls then drive to Pancho's and confront the teenagers. Although Mrs. Randall is sympathetic, Mr. Randall accuses Danny of turning his daughter into a "nasty little tramp." When Sue reveals that they have gotten married, her father promises to have the marriage annulled and send Danny to jail for taking a minor across a state line. The next day, Sue goes to Danny's apartment crying, but he tells her that he is no good and does not want to cause her any more trouble. When she puts her ring back on, Danny says that their only hope is to leave and go to another town for a fresh start, although it will not be easy at first. They plan for her to sneak out of the house again that night and meet him at 7:30 near the lake. Danny then goes to Pancho's to tell Frida and Slats about leaving and is overheard by Brad. That evening, Freddy calls to tell Nico that he has neither the money nor the packages and plead for more time. Nico refuses and says that he will find him. Desperate, Freddy calls the police. Meanwhile, Brad uses a hypodermic needle to inject himself with drugs. While Brad is high, Nico's cohort comes to the door and says that Nico will not be happy that he has disobeyed him. Brad shrugs off the warning, takes a gun and reveals that he is going after Danny. The cohort later tells Nico that Brad is "on the junk again," but before they can go looking for him, two policemen arrive and place them under arrest. At the lake, Sue, Slats and Frida are waiting for Danny when Brad arrives, brandishing his gun. He then orders Slats and Frida to leave. After their car stalls on the road, they encounter Danny, who tells them to go for the police, then drives to the lake. Meanwhile, Mr. and Mrs. Randall realize that Sue has left home and learn from Frida's mother that she has gone to the lake to meet Danny. When Danny reaches the lake, Brad threatens to kill him, then turns the gun toward Sue. Just then, the policemen who have Nico and his cohort in their car are ordered to the lake after Slats's call to the police. They arrive just as the Randalls pull up and observe Danny trying to fight Brad to save Sue. Nico then pleads with his brother to give up the gun, but as he tries to take it, it accidentally goes off, killing Brad. As Nico weeps for his brother, Mr. Randall, who now realizes that Danny is a good boy, tells Sue "let's take him home."

Film Details

Release Date
Nov 1960
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Marathon Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
The Filmgroup, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Missouri, Chillicothe, United States

Technical Specs

Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

Troubled Teens Triple Feature


Hoodlums in black leather jackets. Teenage femme fatales. Drag races. Knife fights and rumbles. Bullies and wimps. All the cliches of urban high school life in the fifties are on display in Something Weird's latest offering - a "Troubled Teens Triple Feature" on DVD (distributed by Image Entertainment) that includes High School Big Shot (1959), High School Caesar (1960) and Date Bait (1960). Produced in the wake of Blackboard Jungle and Rebel Without a Cause (both 1955), the above features were among the countless low-budget exploitation films targeted for teen audiences of that era but all three are a cut above the usual formulaic melodrama.

The headliner of the package - High School Big Shot - is actually a film noir in disguise. What starts out as a tale of unrequited teenage lust and ambition detours into a drug money heist plot with dire results for everyone. The title character - Marvin Grant (Tom Pittman) - makes straight A¿s but suffers from low self-esteem until Betty (Virginia Aldridge), the class beauty, appeals to him for some after-school term paper help. We know Betty is no good - after all, her boyfriend Vince (Howard Viet) is the school bad boy - but Marvin falls madly in love, despite Betty's voracious appetite for the finer things in life. Then, while working at his after-school job as a shipping clerk on the waterfront, he overhears his employer discussing a million dollar heroin deal with the arranged time and place for the transaction. That's the set-up but it doesn't begin to describe the quirkier moments of this MacBeth wannabe that features some inappropriate comic relief in the form of Marvin's heist partners (a shady druggist and his safecracker brother-in-law) and an odd father-son relationship; Marvin's divorced, ne'er-do-well dad can't hold a job and constantly sponges off his son. He's not much of a confidence builder either. When Marvin proudly tells him he's dating Betty, the old man counters, "Hey, she's the best looking chick in the whole school, ain't she? What's she going out with you for?" Because Betty knows a sucker when she sees one, Pops! And Virginia Aldridge's stylized performance as the bad seed is one of the pleasures of High School Big Shot. Alternating between a sexy tease and a spoiled brat, she plays the role with barely suppressed glee, unmasking herself as a total sociopath in the final reel. It's a shame her career didn't progress after this. In fact, she only appeared in one more film, demoted to "extra" status; her screen credit reads "gnome-maiden" in the Disney fantasy, The Gnome-Mobile, (1967).

Tom Pittman's performance as Marvin, on the other hand, is at times painful to watch; a bundle of Method acting tics obviously influenced by James Dean at his most overwrought. He was much more promising in Sam Fuller's Verboten! (1959). Unfortunately, High School Big Shot was his last film; he died in a car accident the same year. The print quality of High School Big Shot is fair at best, marred by scratches and frame damage, but it somehow seems appropriate for something that would have turned up at the drive-in in the '50s in a similarly battered state.

In terms of pure fun, High School Caesar is sure to be the disc favorite. Whether viewed as a look at fascism on the rise or a juvenile delinquent version of Little Caesar, it's hard not to enjoy John Ashley's smug self-confidence as a sociopathic rich kid who easily manipulates those around him through simple psychology. Ashley was usually cast as the leading man's best pal in teen flicks of the '50s and '60s (he's a regular fixture in the AIP Beach Party movies as Frankie Avalon's backup) and later as the hero in Filipino horror films such as The Mad Doctor of Blood Island (1968). But Ashley's forte might be slick control freaks like the one he plays in High School Caesar. We know he's a little dictator from the moment we see Matt Stevens, beating up a fellow classmate with the help of his own goon squad, all of whom fall into a goosestep behind him when he leads the way. Matt is not your typical high school hoodlum however. For one thing, he's running for president of the student body. What self-respecting delinquent wants to be class president? One who has the heart of a crooked politician. In record time, Matt throws the student election, is proclaimed king and begins imposing restrictions on those who oppose him. He tries to charge a fee for off-campus drag races, makes unrealistic promises to his flunkies and uses his charm and then intimidation tactics to make Wanda (Judy Nugent), the new girl in school, date him. But Wanda's no fool; she's the real rebel in this film and tells Matt off in front of everyone, "I don't take orders from anybody and especially from a pampered little punk like you." That earns her a hard slap and later a close call at rape in the backseat of Matt's car. And that's only the tip of the Matt Stevens iceberg - the guy is a blackmailer, thief, extortionist and murderer! It finally takes the whole student body to bring him down - after he's roused Wanda's all-American boyfriend to action and alienated his own gang, particularly his prot¿ Crickett (Steve Stevens, now here's a sick master-slave relationship). Despite the amoral behavior on display in High School Caesar, this is a high school where nobody seems to smoke, drink or do drugs. And the chief villain is a textbook example of the pampered but ignored child. While his parents gallivant around Europe, Matt is attended by his much despised butler Carter ("If you can't perform your duties to my satisfaction then I'll just have to replace you") and Lucy, his cook, who seems to function as a substitute mother. In one of the weirder exchanges, Matt gazes at the elderly, overweight woman and says, "Ya know, Lucy, I've been looking at you and you get prettier everyday. I just expect to walk in here one day and find that one of your boyfriends has carried you off for good." And he's being sincere! Lucy takes good care of her boy, even plays his favorite music while she serves him breakfast and it's not rock 'n roll; it sounds more like muzak. The real Matt - the one the students don't see - is an emotional mess, one who cries into his pillow at night, surrounded by relics from his childhood (one great moment - the camera closes in on his bronzed baby shoes atop his bedside radio). Like High School Big Shot, the print quality of this film is serviceable but not pristine by any means. The nicks, blemishes and occasional emulsion mark certainly won't prevent your enjoyment of this twisted little J.D. opus.

Third-billed and the most provocatively titled film in the trio, Date Bait is a melodrama with a Romeo and Juliet subplot. Danny (Gary Clarke, previously seen in Dragstrip Riot, 1958) is from the wrong side of the tracks but he's a good kid and wants to marry Sue (Marla Ryan), despite major resistance from her class-conscious parents, particularly her old man. Meanwhile, Sue's former boyfriend Brad (Dick Gering) has just returned from a treatment center for an undisclosed illness (heroin addiction) and begins stalking Sue's every movement. The fact that his brother Nico is a local racketeer creates a further risk to Danny and Sue's happiness. Despite the rock bottom budget and some lame comic relief provided by Danny's goofball friends, Bud and Frieda, Date Bait is worth seeing for Richard Gering's twitchy, neurotic performance as the ill-fated Brad. In the course of the film, his character tries to knife Danny and rape/strangle Sue ("If I can't have you, no one else will!") yet he still manages to generate some sympathy for his self-destructive character. One peculiar aspect of this film, which binds it to the other two on the DVD, is the depiction of its teenage protagonists (never mind that all the actors look like they're pushing 30). Everyone appears to be the product of a dysfunctional family. In Date Bait, both Danny and Brad are without parents and live with their older brothers; Danny's is completely non-attentive, Brad's is aggressively overprotective. In High School Big Shot, Marvin is viewed as a meal ticket by his father while Betty's dad writes her off as a whore. And in High School Caesar, there are NO parents in sight and no one to care at all about Matt's fate. It's a rough world out there. No wonder these kids have bad attitudes.

Something Weird's "Troubled Teens" triple feature includes a relatively modest offering of disc extras unlike some of their releases which are stocked to the gills with oddball shorts and obscurities. Besides the original theatrical trailer for High School Big Shot, there are trailers for The Choppers (1961), Jacktown (1962), The Violent Years (1956), Wild Guitar (1962) and a gallery of teens-run-wild exploitation art. All in all, a fun disc and recommended for connoisseurs of juvenile delinquency flicks and college professors offering courses in psychology 101.

For more information about the Troubled Teens Triple Feature, visit Image Entertainment. To order the Troubled Teens Triple Feature, go to TCM Shopping.

by Jeff Stafford
Troubled Teens Triple Feature

Troubled Teens Triple Feature

Hoodlums in black leather jackets. Teenage femme fatales. Drag races. Knife fights and rumbles. Bullies and wimps. All the cliches of urban high school life in the fifties are on display in Something Weird's latest offering - a "Troubled Teens Triple Feature" on DVD (distributed by Image Entertainment) that includes High School Big Shot (1959), High School Caesar (1960) and Date Bait (1960). Produced in the wake of Blackboard Jungle and Rebel Without a Cause (both 1955), the above features were among the countless low-budget exploitation films targeted for teen audiences of that era but all three are a cut above the usual formulaic melodrama. The headliner of the package - High School Big Shot - is actually a film noir in disguise. What starts out as a tale of unrequited teenage lust and ambition detours into a drug money heist plot with dire results for everyone. The title character - Marvin Grant (Tom Pittman) - makes straight A¿s but suffers from low self-esteem until Betty (Virginia Aldridge), the class beauty, appeals to him for some after-school term paper help. We know Betty is no good - after all, her boyfriend Vince (Howard Viet) is the school bad boy - but Marvin falls madly in love, despite Betty's voracious appetite for the finer things in life. Then, while working at his after-school job as a shipping clerk on the waterfront, he overhears his employer discussing a million dollar heroin deal with the arranged time and place for the transaction. That's the set-up but it doesn't begin to describe the quirkier moments of this MacBeth wannabe that features some inappropriate comic relief in the form of Marvin's heist partners (a shady druggist and his safecracker brother-in-law) and an odd father-son relationship; Marvin's divorced, ne'er-do-well dad can't hold a job and constantly sponges off his son. He's not much of a confidence builder either. When Marvin proudly tells him he's dating Betty, the old man counters, "Hey, she's the best looking chick in the whole school, ain't she? What's she going out with you for?" Because Betty knows a sucker when she sees one, Pops! And Virginia Aldridge's stylized performance as the bad seed is one of the pleasures of High School Big Shot. Alternating between a sexy tease and a spoiled brat, she plays the role with barely suppressed glee, unmasking herself as a total sociopath in the final reel. It's a shame her career didn't progress after this. In fact, she only appeared in one more film, demoted to "extra" status; her screen credit reads "gnome-maiden" in the Disney fantasy, The Gnome-Mobile, (1967). Tom Pittman's performance as Marvin, on the other hand, is at times painful to watch; a bundle of Method acting tics obviously influenced by James Dean at his most overwrought. He was much more promising in Sam Fuller's Verboten! (1959). Unfortunately, High School Big Shot was his last film; he died in a car accident the same year. The print quality of High School Big Shot is fair at best, marred by scratches and frame damage, but it somehow seems appropriate for something that would have turned up at the drive-in in the '50s in a similarly battered state. In terms of pure fun, High School Caesar is sure to be the disc favorite. Whether viewed as a look at fascism on the rise or a juvenile delinquent version of Little Caesar, it's hard not to enjoy John Ashley's smug self-confidence as a sociopathic rich kid who easily manipulates those around him through simple psychology. Ashley was usually cast as the leading man's best pal in teen flicks of the '50s and '60s (he's a regular fixture in the AIP Beach Party movies as Frankie Avalon's backup) and later as the hero in Filipino horror films such as The Mad Doctor of Blood Island (1968). But Ashley's forte might be slick control freaks like the one he plays in High School Caesar. We know he's a little dictator from the moment we see Matt Stevens, beating up a fellow classmate with the help of his own goon squad, all of whom fall into a goosestep behind him when he leads the way. Matt is not your typical high school hoodlum however. For one thing, he's running for president of the student body. What self-respecting delinquent wants to be class president? One who has the heart of a crooked politician. In record time, Matt throws the student election, is proclaimed king and begins imposing restrictions on those who oppose him. He tries to charge a fee for off-campus drag races, makes unrealistic promises to his flunkies and uses his charm and then intimidation tactics to make Wanda (Judy Nugent), the new girl in school, date him. But Wanda's no fool; she's the real rebel in this film and tells Matt off in front of everyone, "I don't take orders from anybody and especially from a pampered little punk like you." That earns her a hard slap and later a close call at rape in the backseat of Matt's car. And that's only the tip of the Matt Stevens iceberg - the guy is a blackmailer, thief, extortionist and murderer! It finally takes the whole student body to bring him down - after he's roused Wanda's all-American boyfriend to action and alienated his own gang, particularly his prot¿ Crickett (Steve Stevens, now here's a sick master-slave relationship). Despite the amoral behavior on display in High School Caesar, this is a high school where nobody seems to smoke, drink or do drugs. And the chief villain is a textbook example of the pampered but ignored child. While his parents gallivant around Europe, Matt is attended by his much despised butler Carter ("If you can't perform your duties to my satisfaction then I'll just have to replace you") and Lucy, his cook, who seems to function as a substitute mother. In one of the weirder exchanges, Matt gazes at the elderly, overweight woman and says, "Ya know, Lucy, I've been looking at you and you get prettier everyday. I just expect to walk in here one day and find that one of your boyfriends has carried you off for good." And he's being sincere! Lucy takes good care of her boy, even plays his favorite music while she serves him breakfast and it's not rock 'n roll; it sounds more like muzak. The real Matt - the one the students don't see - is an emotional mess, one who cries into his pillow at night, surrounded by relics from his childhood (one great moment - the camera closes in on his bronzed baby shoes atop his bedside radio). Like High School Big Shot, the print quality of this film is serviceable but not pristine by any means. The nicks, blemishes and occasional emulsion mark certainly won't prevent your enjoyment of this twisted little J.D. opus. Third-billed and the most provocatively titled film in the trio, Date Bait is a melodrama with a Romeo and Juliet subplot. Danny (Gary Clarke, previously seen in Dragstrip Riot, 1958) is from the wrong side of the tracks but he's a good kid and wants to marry Sue (Marla Ryan), despite major resistance from her class-conscious parents, particularly her old man. Meanwhile, Sue's former boyfriend Brad (Dick Gering) has just returned from a treatment center for an undisclosed illness (heroin addiction) and begins stalking Sue's every movement. The fact that his brother Nico is a local racketeer creates a further risk to Danny and Sue's happiness. Despite the rock bottom budget and some lame comic relief provided by Danny's goofball friends, Bud and Frieda, Date Bait is worth seeing for Richard Gering's twitchy, neurotic performance as the ill-fated Brad. In the course of the film, his character tries to knife Danny and rape/strangle Sue ("If I can't have you, no one else will!") yet he still manages to generate some sympathy for his self-destructive character. One peculiar aspect of this film, which binds it to the other two on the DVD, is the depiction of its teenage protagonists (never mind that all the actors look like they're pushing 30). Everyone appears to be the product of a dysfunctional family. In Date Bait, both Danny and Brad are without parents and live with their older brothers; Danny's is completely non-attentive, Brad's is aggressively overprotective. In High School Big Shot, Marvin is viewed as a meal ticket by his father while Betty's dad writes her off as a whore. And in High School Caesar, there are NO parents in sight and no one to care at all about Matt's fate. It's a rough world out there. No wonder these kids have bad attitudes. Something Weird's "Troubled Teens" triple feature includes a relatively modest offering of disc extras unlike some of their releases which are stocked to the gills with oddball shorts and obscurities. Besides the original theatrical trailer for High School Big Shot, there are trailers for The Choppers (1961), Jacktown (1962), The Violent Years (1956), Wild Guitar (1962) and a gallery of teens-run-wild exploitation art. All in all, a fun disc and recommended for connoisseurs of juvenile delinquency flicks and college professors offering courses in psychology 101. For more information about the Troubled Teens Triple Feature, visit Image Entertainment. To order the Troubled Teens Triple Feature, go to TCM Shopping. by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Both of the film's songs, "Date Bait Baby," which was sung over the opening credits, and "Purple Pleated Burmudas," were presented as songs played on the jukebox. According to information in the film's presskit, the production was shot on location in Chillicothe, MO, simultaneous to the filming of another O'Dale Ireland film, High School Caesar (see below).
       Within the story of Date Bait, the name of the town is never mentioned; however, when "Danny Logan" and "Sue Randall" drive to Las Vegas to marry, the trip takes only a few hours, and some interior and exterior locations appear to have been shot in Southern California.