50,000,000 juvenile delinquents can't be wrong! Featuring four rumble-ready features (all preserved from the Something Weird DigiBeta and S-VHS masters, as the original film elements are lost, decayed, or inaccessible), TEENAGE RIOT VIDEO PARTY is a campy ode to mid-century teenage turmoil. Remember: "This will affect every parent and teen in the entire world . . . because it's real!"
LOST, LONELY, AND VICIOUS (1958, 72 mins, B&W)
Filmed in the wake of James Dean’s death, this noir-ish slice of Dean-spolitation is the best movie about Hollywood ever made in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
JACKTOWN (1962, 58 mins, B&W)
Feeling like a gaudy juvenile delinquent paperback come-to-life, this teen prison expose was filmed on the sleazy streets of Michigan and features a role from Patty McCormack (THE BAD SEED).
THE FLAMING TEEN-AGE (1956, 69 mins, B&W)
Jesus (kind of) saves in this "true story" about drugs and salvation from Irvin S. Yeaworth, a maker of 16mm religious shorts who would later direct THE BLOB.
THE NARCOTIC STORY (1958, 78 mins, Color)
This outrageous amalgam of classroom scare films and nasty exploitation was produced by a company called Police Science—so you know it's legit.
directed by: Frank Myers, William Martin, Irvin Yeaworth, Robert W. Larson
starring: Patty McCormack, Ken Clayton, Art Gilmore
1956-1962 / 277 min (combined) / 1.33:1 / English DTS-HD MA 1.0