Sid Davis, RIP
In his 1999 book Mental Hygiene: Classroom Films, 1945-1970, Ken Smith introduces the oeuvre of Sid Davis with a bit of context:
By the late 1940s social guidance filmmakers were in a quandary. The world they had created in their films was brimming with positive role models and happy endings, but real life was not so clean and simple. In dark alleys and less-desirable neighborhoods there existed a world of unspoken unpleasantness: substance abusers, sexual perverts, juvenile delinquents. Good kids had to be warned of the dangers; bad kids had to be shown the consequences of bad behavior.
Social guidance filmmakers wouldn't make films about such things. As social engineers they believed that kids would imitate what they were shown, hence films should show only uplifting images. As profit-minded businesspeople they feared that films about disagreeable subjects would upset prudish educators, hurting sales for the rest of their product line. It would fall to someone else, an outsider, to get to the grim task of making mental hygiene films about the nasty side of life.
That someone was Sid Davis.
Davis, who just died at age 90, got his start as a Hollywood extra; from 1941 to 1952, he was John Wayne's stand-in, and it was Wayne who lent him the money to start his own production company. His movies painted a nightmarish world of constant danger -- if your kid managed to escape the gay predators who might lurk in any playground or public restroom, they could still be killed in a car wreck or be led ineluctably from pot ("that's jive talk for marijuana") to heroin. Almost anything could be a threat: The key line in his L.A. Times obit is its description of his 1951 film Live and Learn, in which a girl "cuts out paper dolls before she jumps up, trips and impales herself on scissors."
Davis occupies a gray area in mid-twentieth-century America. On the one hand, he was an independent filmmaker with his own vision, shooting ultra-low-budget pictures with few constraints. As Smith wrote, "Society's discomfort with Davis's dark world gave him the freedom to do pretty much what he wanted. No committee of educational advisors oversaw his work, no peer group condemned his excesses." But it was educators who bought his movies, and it was schoolchildren who watched them; his films were frequently narrated by government officials or other authority figures, and they weren't averse to speaking the psychiatric language of the time. Davis might not have been a part of the social-engineering community, but he certainly was part of the social-engineering complex. There's a complicated relationship between the supposedly scientific interventions of credentialed experts and the more nakedly paranoid world of grassroots moral panics. Sid Davis was a bridge from one to the other.
And the movies themselves? You can find a handful of them on YouTube and the Internet Archive. In Smith's words, Davis had "a trancelike style, stripped of anything even remotely approaching drama or human emotion," while his images offered "the visual dynamism of a pancake." That might be the real secret to his success: He managed to make delinquency look boring.
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It's not a movie, but we've got a "Fleshpots of Malibu" postcard as refrigerator art.
One of my favorites of the "classroom film" genre:
http://www.gay.com/richmedia/quicktime/POSMA2005/fudge-packer.mov
8^)
JMJ
if your kid managed to escape the gay predators who might lurk in any playground or public restroom
He meant the houses of Congress, right?
This guy's story would make a great book; paging Joe Bob Briggs...
What I mean is Sid Davis specifically. The Ken Smith book (which I plan to buy and read) covers a broader scope.
Definitely pick up Smith's book. I've been a fan of this stuff since high school, when some friends and I shot a 16mm parody of the Physical Science Study Committee films that Frank Zappa's dad appeared in, and I found it an immensely satisfying read.
There are also a surprising number of DVDs of this material out there. Netflix carries most if not all of the Educational Archives series, and Something Weird Video has acres of the stuff, which they both sell and cycle through Comcast's "Something Weird" on-demand video selection.
God, no wonder you baby-boomers are so fucked up.
Czar: remember, the Boomers are the ones who decided the Warner Bros. cartoons they grew up watching were going to warp the minds of their own pwecious widdle darlings, so they edited out all the 'violence'.
And re. the 'Danger to Boys' film: OMG, Mr. Whipple is a murderous pedophile. He's bored of squeezing the Charmin, now he's gonna squeeze some scrawny little teenage putz named Mike! (Then presumably chop up his body and, I dunno, duct tape the pieces to the paneling in his den.)
ZOMG DON'T GO FISHING YOU MIGHT CATCH THE GAY!