Mad Youth (1939) Poster

(1939)

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6/10
"OK folks, the party's on"!
classicsoncall17 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Some of these exploitation films from the Thirties are better than others, and for the most part, this one's a blast. While it's main target involves the seamy side of the prostitution trade, there's a lot of stuff going on that will simply amaze you. Like the wild house party Marian Morgan (Mary Ainslee) throws together once her mother steps out with her favorite gigolo from the local escort service, The Count (Willy Castello). I'm using the term 'wild' rather loosely here, as most of the kids were basically having some fun dancing, with a side game of strip poker going on. I don't know who's idea it was to have a baton twirler show up, that made the whole thing just a little surreal.

A later scene appears to take place in some sort of night club where the entertainment is provided in a Mexican motif, a la Spanish dancers and a faux bullfight act. That's right, not a misprint. A face painted bullfighter waves his cape at a dog outfitted with a pair of longhorns, and gets a rise out of the crowd when the 'bull' butts him in the backside. This is not the risqué kind of business I'd expect to see in something titled "Mad Youth", but hey, I'll go with it.

The main story involves the previously mentioned mother and daughter Morgans who have a falling out over The Count. He wants to date Marian for real, and does so, until mysteriously dropping out of sight. Distraught, Marian looks up her friend Helen (Betty Atkinson) who by this time has been ensnared by a prostitution racket. Both girls would have been goners if The Count hadn't shown up to make the save, having decided to go straight and quit the escort service.

Best line of the film was Marian to The Count about midway through the story, so good I had to rewind to hear it a second time - "Aw, don't be an icky". That my friend, was good for a bonus point.
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5/10
For a sleazy exploitation film, this is a cut above the rest!
planktonrules24 September 2007
This is a sleazy little film about "white slavery"--in other words, women forced into prostitution. While the budget was obviously very low and the production values low, this film actually was pretty watchable due to decent writing--as the plot often surprised me and wasn't completely telegraphed (something usual for the genre). Oddly, while the writing isn't bad, portions of the film look like a second-rate talent show, as various acts (some good, some bad) parade through two scenes that are largely irrelevant. In the first one, there are two excellent jitterbug dancers (this makes sense at a "wild party") and a drum major (huh??!?!). Later, it's pretty much the same.

The plot itself concerns a very vain and stupid mother who is too busy running around with male escorts (the real type, not male prostitutes). Her favorite male escort begins dating her daughter on the sly and you assume he's up to no good--especially since she seems pretty "fast". However, where the film goes next and the actual character of this man was very unexpected--making this very low-budget film worth a peek. Aside from a few poor performances and the odd talent show portions, it's a pretty good suspense film about the seamier side of life.

By the way, for an exploitation film, this one does NOT have any nude scenes--the plot is rather adult and there are some women in lingerie but that's really about all.
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6/10
"A Real Life Drama"....
kidboots20 March 2012
Warning: Spoilers
... that's what it said on the credits but you don't want to believe everything you read!!! It may have looked like Betty Compson had hit hard times but looking at her filmography she really never stopped working - she liked money too much!!! She had a big personality and was not too proud to go to poverty row studios like Atlas and Merit when her services were wanted!! Advertised as a "real life drama", "Mad Youth" may have tried to entice cinema patrons in with the titilating title but as usual there was nothing much going on with this set of youngsters.

Lucy Morgan (Compson) is a frequent user of escort agencies and although she is divorced, what with her bridge parties and hiring of gentlemen partners, she often has to borrow money from her daughter. Marian (Mary Ainslee) also has a double life - demure school girl by day, party giver by night where "crazy jitterbugging" (those dances are the highlight of the movie) and "strip" poker are the order of the day!! Lucy and Marian's devotion is just a sham, Lucy feels "baby" is cramping her style and is soon spouting one of those "I never wanted you, I wanted fun and excitement, my marriage was hell" speeches. Her new escort is "The Count" (a younger and chubbier Ricardo Cortez lookalike) but he is not interested in her "that way" - he prefers Marian!! He is horrified at the way he feels American parents let their children run wild (Marian's marriage is going to be fun - I don't think) and there is yet another speech on the downside of modern parenting!! He berates Lucy when he finds out she has let Marian visit Helen who has left town for marriage with a man she has never met!!

It's the same old story - Helen is working in a brothel and under threat of punishment has now lured Marian to the same fate. "The Count" steps in and saves both Marian and Helen from a fate worse than death and while he and Marian plan their future, Lucy is still on the escort treadmill - "I want a nice young college boy, around 27, 28, the same age as me"!!! Once again Betty Compson's professionalism stood out and held the piece together. Mary Ainslee had better luck with the Three Stooges, being in a few of their shorts.
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5/10
Forever 21
st-shot18 April 2014
American society dames get a cuffing and a lecture on parenthood from a faux count gigolo in this pre-war cheapie looking to cash in on lurid sensationalism. Disjointed and sloppy most of the way it unintentionally (or indifferently)entertains with titillating moralizing as women of all ages pre-sage this age of narcissism with self centered abandon.

Upper cruster Lucy Morgan (Betty Compson) spends most of her time playing bridge with fellow elites and buying the attention of phony counts from an escort service while ignoring daughter Marian (Mary Ainslee) who throws wild parties while she is absent. Enter Count Dehoven (Willy Castello), gigolo with a conscience and the attention of both mom and daughter. The Count falls heavily for the daughter much to mom's consternation, causing a major rift that sends Marian off to live with her star struck friend who in reality is being held hostage in a bordello, a fate now awaiting Marian. Can she be rescued? Looks like a job for the Count.

This crass high society expose may lack subtlety, second takes and production values of any kind but it does offer some warped incite into the era ( jitterbugging teens, absentee parents) via cautionary tale and the offbeat casting of a suave two bit gigolo as its moral conscience. Battling the hackneyed script and his own limited abilities Willy Costello brings both the unctuous and noble out in his Count DeHoven.

Ainslee's Marian is a bit long in the tooth for a confused teen but silent screen superstar in career free fall Compson is indomitable in a low key Billie Burke sought of style as an incurable romantic and while their scenes together lack smoothness they do confront the heart of the matter.

Mad Youth puts on no airs as it plows its way to its tepid climax but it does score points with its Code challenging moments and fun juxtaposing of the generations; the younger caught up in an energized frenzy at a party (featuring in another bizarre twist a baton twirler in full uniform) while their ever so proper parents battle ennui at bridge tables in another part of town with Ma Morgan attempting to bed the count, forever lying about her age.

Mad Youth may be a bad film but under the right circumstances it can be quite entertaining.
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5/10
Con-No-Sir! That's what I'd call a five dollar word!
kapelusznik1827 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Wanting to spice up her life divorcée Lucy Morgan gets to paint the town red with the help of gigolo Count DeHoven from an escort service in town. While having the time of her life Lucy's teenage daughter Marian is locked in her room after 10:00 PM doing nothing but smoking & drinking & reading cheap dime novels about love. it's when the Count takes an interest in the young and pretty Marlan that her mom become very jealous of her and demands the Count to take her out almost every night, at $40.00 a pop, to keep him away from her sexy daughter as well as keep him all to himself!

This soon gets the Count a bit frustrated in being forced by the escort service to be with that old bag instead of her sexy daughter Marian. It's when the Count gets hooked on Marian that she in getting letters from her girlfriend Helen in far off Pittsburg about how great things are there with her now being happily married she decides to go see her there and stay with Helen and husband for the weekend. As Marlin soon finds out when she gets to Pittsburg that Helen instead of being happily married is actually a victim of a white slavery or prostitution ring who's being held against her will and forced to provide sex for money for her pimp handler! It's the Count who in finding out what a predicament that both Marian & Hellen are in drives to Pittsburg to save them and their virginity from this den of sin!

Amazing battle between The Count and the pimp and his henchmen with them throwing or trying to throw man-like punches that look more like lady-like slaps and seem to miss as much as 70% of the time! One hilarious scene is when the pimp wearing pants that must be two or three sizes smaller then what he's used to wearing split open during the slug or slap fest where we can view, and trying to keep a straight face,his "Fruit of the Loom" embarrassingly exposed for all to see. With the Count finally getting Marlin & Helen freed and driving back home he proposed for her hand in marriage and not to worry about the future. He's just got his citizen papers finalized and a good job waiting for him, as a furniture salesman, back home to start a new life for both of them as well as pay the bills.
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3/10
Mediocre drama about a battling mother and daughter...
dwpollar19 February 2007
1st watched 2/19/2007 - 3 out of 10(Dir-Melville Shyer): Mediocre drama about a battling mother and daughter over the affections of a gigolo named "Count." Advertised as an exploitation movie about the horrors of youth but instead it's just a run-of-the-mill romance where it just happens that the mother and daughter are the competitors. The mother is trying to live out her youth all over again by hiring young escorts to take her to wonderful places but one young suitor is more impressed with her daughter. After a spat, the daughter decides to move out and hooks up with an old friend of hers who happens to be trapped in a brothel. The "Count" then comes to the rescue and the rest is cinema history(kind of…)!! This is a very bland drama with professional dancing thrown in to keep us entertained around the silly story. The problem is that the dancing is better than the story, so I guess they should have made the movie around them instead of using them as window-dressing. Of course, that would have been a different movie but possibly a better one.
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"What Do You Expect Us Modern Mothers To Do?!"...
azathothpwiggins18 July 2021
In MAD YOUTH, Marian Morgan (Mary Ainslee) waits for her mother to go out to her bridge game. Then, she invites "the gang" over for a bash. These 25 year old "teens" spend the night "jitterbugging" and playing "strip poker"! Adding to this godless mayhem, a baton-twirling majorette shows up! In a glittery uniform!

Meanwhile, mum's been out with a gigolo known as "The Count". When she brings "The Count" home for a nightcap, he falls for Marian!

Thus, begins Marian's downward spiral into an abyss of mariachi bands, clown-faced matadors, dogs in bull costumes, and human trafficking!

MAD YOUTH is another melodramatic morality tale from yesteryear. While not as deliriously absurd as REEFER MADNESS, it does have its own silly charm. Plus, the dance routines are a hoot!...
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4/10
Sleazy morality story
Leofwine_draca26 August 2015
MAD YOUTH is another morality fable which looks at the plight of young girls caught up in vice and prostitution. As usual it tells the tale of an innocent young girl who, through no fault of her own, ends up being imprisoned inside a brothel. Who can save her and will they manage to do it in time?

This film has a slightly different angle to the rest in that the focus of the drama is on the relationship between mother and daughter. In fact, it's the mother's actions - in particular her cavorting with male prostitutes (!) - that causes the daughter to flee from her familial situation and fall into something even worse. Thus the film's erstwhile moral question is whether parents are responsible for the behaviour of their offspring.

There's some cheesy, heavy-handed moralising here, alongside the usual low-rent production values common in such sensationalist dramas. The acting is fairly average, although a little better than I've seen elsewhere. The film also picks up in the last twenty minutes, becoming something of a suspense thriller, and it even offers up some fun fight scenes; sadly it's not enough to make this a good film overall.
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3/10
Mad youth in 1939 looked like Lana Turner, not Ginger Rogers.
mark.waltz16 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This ridiculous exploitation movie has a leading teen character (Mary Ainslee) who looked nearly as old as her on-screen mother, early 1930's B star Betty Compson. The divorced mom has a penchant for younger gigolos, even for bridge, and her troubled daughter is obviously influenced by her mom's lifestyle choices. All that glitters is not gold, and for these platinum females, that gold is the type that fools confuse with the real thing. While mom plays bridge (and makes a play for a very old looking 28 year old broke European count), daughter hangs out with her gang in another apartment, jitterbugging while others play strip poker. Mom's friends are silly old fools who either gossip about her or proclaim their love of the single meaningless life.

The jitterbugging is pretty well done (and definitely scandalous for 1940, showing an upside down girl exposing her panty's), but the tap dancing baton twirler is completely out of place. In fact, there's too much of the specialties and not enough plot in this film until the last reel that clocks in at just over an hour. The acting is atrocious with mother and daughter squabbling so unrealistically with idiotic lines so bad, you expect to catch them smirking in amusement over their absurdity.

It's obvious where the plot will go as one of Ainslee's friends (Betty Atkinson) ends up victimized by a prostitution ring (as advertised in the local as newspaper) and Ainslee makes a play for her mother's gigolo (Willy Castello) who is actually the moral conscience of the film. Unfortunately, in spite of the wacky plot and screenplay, there's actually very little to laugh at because the slow pacing which dominates the film until both Ainslee and Atkinson end up prisoners in a swank looking mansion that is really a bordello. Attempts for lavish sets still look cheap (a large bedroom isn't necessarily a glamorous one), and the anticipation of serious drama to explode takes forever to get going. Donald Kerr is brought in for several really idiotic scenes as the ditzy cab driver who somehow fits in to the film's outlandish conclusion. Not horrible, but missing the humor one expects from an overly dramatic moral tale.
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7/10
Castello, not Costello
CatherineYronwode11 October 2006
This movie is quite mature in its themes, and i recommend it as a better than average "exploitation" film. It stars Willam (Willy) Castello, the suave, often villainous Dutch-born actor, as the Count de Hoven. This is not the same actor as William Costello, born in Rhode Island, USA, who voiced Popeye. It is also of interest to note that some scenes from "Mad Youth" were later excerpted and used alongside other Willy Castello exploitation film clips to make an entirely new feature, "Confessions of a Vice Baron," in which the Castello character narrates his life of crime and multiple name-changes -- as if every character he had played in each of the earlier movies had been one man in disguise. I have never seen another movie that uses this device, and so i have made an effort to watch every film that contributed to "Confessions of a Vice Baron." So far, "Mad Youth" is by far the best of the lot.
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3/10
Pretty bad...but great dance sequence.
tles75 May 2019
How did these movies get past the censors and where were they exhibited since the studios owned all the theaters? Check out the one dance move that surprises.
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8/10
Explosive jitterbugging
plushing-417-73292520 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I can't say much for the film as a whole other than it is a nice time transport to a not- so-innocent age. One of the funniest cuts I've ever seen has the mom saying to a friend her daughter gives her no worries, she's the best behaved....cut to the daughter playing strip poker.

Strip poker -- when did you last think about that?

The dance sequence makes this a must-see for fans of jitterbug, Lindy Hop, East Coast Swing -- I've never understood the need to slice dice and name nice all these dances, which aren't obviously different from each other categorically, although the professionals see the variations clearly.

The best male dancer, he in the striped polo shirt, is the late great Ray Hirsch, a beloved figure in swing dancing for over seventy years. He died in August 2015, age 94. You can find him on the web being interviewed. One of those people we would give anything to be -- just intrinsically happy (to all appearances, anyway).

Here and there a commenter thinks it's weird for a drum majorette in full mufti to suddenly turn up at the party. In fact, she is properly foreshadowed a few minutes earlier when you see her in street clothes at the party saying (low voice -- have to concentrate to understand her) to the stiff in a sports jacket that she has her outfit or costume with her and evidently is going to change into it.

While not as gymnastic as Whitey's Lindy Hoppers in Hellzapoppin' -- which to me is a plus, I get nervous when they start tossing the girls around -- the eccentric steps in Mad Youth's illicit party scene really pop and are pleasurable to watch. In the last few decades there's been a huge reawakening of this kind of dancing. Good!
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6/10
In the Mood for the Forties
wes-connors9 April 2011
Shapely sweater-clad Mary Ainslee (as Marian Morgan) enjoys wild nights partying while "lonesome" mother Betty Compson (as Lucy) prefers quieter evenings playing bridge with "dedicated and refined" gigolos like accented immigrant Willy Castello (as "Count" DeKoven). With her alimony check spent, Ms. Compson can't afford the extra charge for Mr. Castello's "love" on their first date, but future funds mean "necking" sessions. Then, when Castello meets Ms. Ainslee, both mother and daughter desire the same man. Are Castello's intentions good, or "strictly dishonorable?"

"Mad Youth" takes an unexpected turn for a last act, after skirting with some actual depth. The performances of Ainslee and Compson become quite good, and intriguingly natural. It's nice to see women portrayed as interested in sex (for a change). After the rival mother and daughter share a marvelous scene, the story returns to its lurid roots. The dissolve and double exposures used for Ainslee's "drunk scene" and Compson's discovery of her daughter's diary are well done. The uninhibited dancing of Tommy Wonder and the "Jitter Bugs" is another highlight. Watch for the slinky blonde prostitute to stand in front of a revealing lamp, and one of the fighters to split his pants, in the film's final minutes.

****** Mad Youth (5/5/40) Melville Shyer ~ Mary Ainslee, Betty Compson, Willy Castello, Tommy Wonder
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7/10
quirkier
Cristi_Ciopron26 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This movie is copyrighted '39. Like in 'Escort Girl', there's an escort bureau, but here Betty Compson's character is the customer of the escort bureau, not the head; her role here is a supporting one, less dramatic, but masterly played, and it made me think how good would she have been as Blanche Dubois, had that part ever been offered to her …. This earlier movie is good, but not as good as 'Escort Girl'; it's also very different structurally, with many interludes to give an idea of the decade's fun, dance and club scenes. Castello's delusions of urbanity make up for the script's sketchiness; his crassness as a player shows up when he has to reprimand the mother.

Yet, this movie has a certain chilling, sepulchral, heartrending, morbid, quirky, uncanny quality, an authentic feel of ghostliness, a scent of formaldehyde, as expressed in the waxen appearance of the characters. As such, it's not unnerving, but deeply eerie.

The sequence contrasting the two parties has the moral in a nutshell, when aged and youthful characters are shown partying. The moral stance is straightforward, the aged are blamed for the youth' mistakes, and among the youth are differentiated two types, the naughty daughter and her weak friend who becomes the girl of predilection in a brothel. There's skillful cut in the sequence contrasting the oldster's party, and the youth's. We see the neglectful parents partying, trespassing, and the youth partying.

Sometimes, the shots can be striking, with a surprising appeal: Betty Atkinson returning home from the party, through the rain; or, later, the whorehouse where she's a hostage. Therefore, I wouldn't dismiss its craft.

Fay McKenzie has a bit part.

Mary Ainslee is at ease with her trashy character, a slutty girl bent on partying with her gang, but ignoring the hardships and distresses.

I enjoyed the dance of the Hispanic trio, I enjoyed the count's return as a knight, when he recites _dignifiedly the tirade about motherhood and youth. The brothel as seen in the descent in the underworld made a strong impression.
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6/10
Rudimentary But Engaging.
rmax30482313 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
There's a giddy, rushed quality to the B film about a nice girl who finds herself locked up in the room of a whorehouse until she decides to join the party.

The girl, Lucy, lives with her mother and the two don't get along. Lucy is bored, and Mom is always calling up an escort service and asking for the same man, the gentlemanly, dignified "Count." Mom has marriage on her mind despite the difference in age. But the Count, once he meets Lucy, falls for her and gradually she reciprocates his affections. All within the bounds of propriety. The Count is not that kind of guy and Lucy is upright, so to speak.

However, "crabbed age and youth cannot live together." In a rather startling scene between the two, Lucy tells Mom that she's old and no longer attractive to younger men. Mom suggests Lucy go live for a while with her father -- "He always wanted you." The dialog is as corrosive as nitric acid but it's delivered as if the two were discussing what to do about a hang nail. None of the acting is memorable and some is immediately forgettable.

One or two songs are sung. (Zzzzz.) A vaudeville act or two is borrowed and used in a faux Mexican night club. But there are a couple of dance numbers that I quite enjoyed. They feature two now-forgotten jitterbug stars, Ray Hirsch and Betty Atkinson. The latter is attractive as well as athletic. She does a tap dance in a majorette's outfit while twirling two batons. I can't do that. Can you? She also does a wild jitterbug with Hirsch who flips her upside down and exposes her bloomers, which look like Soviet-era garments from Russia. They're good dancers though. I always admire people who can do things that I'm lousy at.

There is a fist fight at the end. The Count rescues the still pristine Lucy and her tainted friend Helen from the cat house and everyone lives happily ever after. Except I don't know about Helen. And I don't think the old lady has much of a future, though she remains determined to have one. She's a poignant figure but is treated mostly for laughs.
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6/10
pretty good
jdfoster-126 August 2004
I enjoyed this movie it was nice look at the teens of the late 30's and early 40's. It had great dance scenes and good music to go with it. with had a very realistic and intense fight scene for it's time. some scenes were a little long and drawn out.it is a good midnight movie it's a drive in style movie fine for the whole family. If you can find a copy you should see it there is not much more to say about it is just OK. it's not memorable but it's good, I mean don,t go out of your way to fine it but if you come across it pick it up for me. If you like black and white movie on a Saturday night you will like this.

love, Steve
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7/10
One of the More Interesting 'Exploitation' Films
sbibb113 April 2005
Warning: Spoilers
"Mad Youth" is one of the better so-called "exploitation" films made in the 1930s. These films were made by independent producers, made cheaply, with poor sets, bad acting, and were rush jobs. While "Mad Youth" was probably made on a low budget, the film has nice sets, an OK cast, and is quite enjoyable. Exploitation films were shown at independent movie theaters, and then would travel along with circuses and sideshows for years to come. The films would be re-named, re-edited and shown again as if it was a new picture.

The plot of "Mad Youth" is this. Betty Compson, a divorced mother of one is a bit of a tramp, hiring male escorts to accompany her to bridge games and parties, and she inevitably sleeps with them, and falls in love with them and plans to marry them. Her daughter, Marian, is a bit of a wild child herself. She throws drinking and stripping parties at her home while her mother is out. Compson's newest escort, played by William Costello, is supposed to be a Count. He cannot stand Compson's aggressiveness towards him, and he begins to date her daughter Marian, which is kept a secret from her mother.

When her mother finds out about the affair, the daughter decides to go away for a while, and visit one of her friends who she thinks has been married, having met her husband from an ad placed in a magazine for those seeking companionship. It turns out that the girl was sold into a prostitution ring and is being held captive. When Marion visits her, she too is held captive and forced into prostitution.

The film is quite enjoyable because it is a film that seems to bypass the production code because it was not a major Hollywood film, and dialog and situations in this film, would not appear in a major Hollywood film for decades to come. Betty Compson is very enjoyable as the slutty mother. Compson was a former silent film star and this was probably a lucky break for her. The rest of the cast is alright, with special attention being payed to William Costello, who played the count. By this time he was already well known for providing the voice to the cartoon character "Popeye."
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7/10
Mad, just so mad
AAdaSC27 October 2023
Nothing really mad going on here at all, of course, apart from the heavy-handed moralizing as delivered by gigolo Count Willy Castello which will have you laughing out loud. And that is the point of these type of films - they are unintentionally hilarious in parts. It's what makes them good entertainment.

The story starts with Betty Compson (Lucy) phoning up for an escort as usual. On this evening she gets Willy Castello and she is not shy in coming forward! She takes him home where they meet up with her daughter Mary Ainslee (Marian). Big mistake. Castello takes a shine to the daughter and they start dating behind the mum's back. Ha ha. This must have happened so many times in real life. Well, the youth party and dance away but there is a new storyline introduced when Ainslee's best friend Betty Atkinson (Helen) absconds from home in response to an advert. The reality is that she has become a prossie and Ainslee unknowingly gets caught up in her plight when she pays her a visit. We need a hero to come and save them.

Meanwhile, Compson ends the film as she started it - by calling up an escort/gigolo to spend her evening with. She really has got life sussed. A good role model.
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