Like Father, Like Son (1961) Poster

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6/10
Like Son, Like Father
Oslo_Jargo27 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
*** This review may contain spoilers ***

*Plot and ending analyzed*

Like Father, Like Son (1961) is a pretty rare film. It's quite interesting to watch. At the start, there's a powerful scene of Tom Laughlin in a church yelling at everything. From there, we see glimpses of Tom Laughlin's chaotic life. He's a football player who has problems with authority and even tries to make friends with a wealthy girl. That comes into conflict with Stefanie Powers, who is his girlfriend.

What to make of it all, well, a bit of cross between a 1950's juvenile delinquent movie, a teenage drama, and an anti-authority movie. It really isn't that bad, it has the feel of a low budget independent film of the time, which allows it to be more provocative (alcoholism and sexual themes).

I thought the ending was entirely ridiculous and detracted from the rest of the film. That lowered it to just an average rating. I'd give it a recommendation though.
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1/10
Insufferably dull...and amateurish.
planktonrules5 October 2012
This was a vanity project by auteur, Tom Laughlin. He wrote, directed, produced AND starred in this film--and it's amazing that anyone let him do any of these duties in the future because it's THAT bad. In fact, the film apparently sat for five years before it was released...because it's THAT bad! The film begins with a bang--Laughlin's character is in church and he's screaming at God and cursing Him. This was very powerful and you assume the film would be a strong film...which it isn't. It just peters out very quickly and Laughlin so underplays the role, it's like watching Billy Jack...in a coma! He soon meets up with the priest from this church and apologizes to him for destroying some property and then, in an excruciatingly long flashback scene tells the man what led to his awful state...and the film soon goes downhill from here. The story is dull but made MUCH worse by amateurish acting and direction that seems non-existent. A few of the performances (such as the 190 year-old teacher) are WORSE than the stuff you'd see in an Ed Wood film--it was that bad. As the film limped along I kept waiting for something, ANYTHING exciting to happen...but it didn't. Just lots of over and under-acting as well as a glacially slow plot. How can you make a 'youth run wild' film THIS boring?!
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1/10
High school? Really?
sdiegotw9 October 2012
Laughlin is supposed to be a high school student. But he was in his late 20s when he made this movie. All of the high school students in this movie appear to be much closer to 40 than 20. None of the actors seem to even try to act like kids. This is no minor point. This movie is all about high school athletes, and the actors playing high school students all look like they are the contemporaries of the teachers and administrators. Even ignoring the age issue, the story is just boring. The issues that seem to be causing the main character so much angst are all just boring. In fairness, it is just bad enough to sit through and marvel at how awful it truly is.
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8/10
ahead-of-its-time sexuality
jobla28 November 2012
By most accounts, the film was shot as early as 1959. Given that, the film seems quite ahead of its time in the depiction of "teenage" sexuality. Stefanie Powers plays the standard "good girl" role, but there is a bit of dialog that suggests that she, too has already had sex. The Tom Laughlin character is sexually assaulted by a girl who is described as being only 17 or 18 (two characters differ as to her age). I'm old enough to have attended the various "teen" films from the late 1950's and early-mid 1960's, and this material is comparatively far ahead of its time. No Disney or Robert Radnitz films of the era dealt with youthful sexuality with such frankness. I found THE YOUNG SINNER to be quite interesting in that regard.

The Tom Laughlin character seems to be a bit of a template for the later Billy Jack persona.
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8/10
Strong stuff
tforbes-218 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
"Like Father, Like Son" (aka "The Young Sinner") may seem dull to many people expecting something like the Billy Jack movies. But Tom Laughlin is an actor, and that means he will do other roles, of course.

The movie itself is open both in terms of its discussion sexuality, as well as its depiction of blasphemous behavior, especially by 1959-60 standards. My impression of the movie is that it could not have been released during the Eisenhower era for those reasons. By 1965, though, movies were becoming more open.

One thing of interest was seeing Milwaukee as it looked in 1960; one gets to see the trolleybuses that ran until June 1965, and you can even see the remnants of the streetcar system that had stopped two years before. You also get to see a teenage Stefanie Powers, who even manages a comic moment very well with her impression of Bela Lugosi.

Whatever the case, this is an interesting movie to see. It is hardly Oscar-winning material, but it is offbeat and interesting nonetheless!!
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