The Explosive Generation is a 1961 film directed by Buzz Kulik. It stars William Shatner and Patty McCormack.[1]
The Explosive Generation | |
---|---|
Directed by | Buzz Kulik |
Written by | Joseph Landon |
Produced by | Stanley Colbert |
Starring | William Shatner Patty McCormack Lee Kinsolving Billy Gray Virginia Field Steve Dunne |
Cinematography | Floyd Crosby |
Edited by | Melvin Shapiro |
Music by | Hal Borne |
Production company | Vega Productions |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
|
Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
editThe story is about Peter Gifford, a teacher who wants to teach high school students to think for themselves and express themselves. A female student pushes to have open classroom discussion about the physical and emotional issues associated with teenage relationships and sex. This issue gets blown out of proportion by parents who don't have the facts and jump to ill-informed conclusions, demanding sanctions against the mostly innocent teacher, who keeps still on the matter to protect the involved students. The entire student body rallies in a Gandhiesque silent protest that helps everyone learn to appreciate the truth of the matter.
Cast
edit- William Shatner as Peter Gifford
- Patty McCormack as Janet Sommers
- Lee Kinsolving as Dan Carlyle
- Virginia Field as Mrs. Katie Sommers
- Billy Gray as Bobby Herman Jr.
- Steve Dunne as Bobby Herman Sr.
- Phillip Terry as Mr. Carlyle
- Arch Johnson as Mr. George Sommers
- Edward Platt as Mr. Morton
- Beau Bridges as Mark
- Stafford Repp as Police Captain
- Vito Scotti as Custodian
- Jocelyn Brando as Mrs. Ryker (uncredited)
- David Geffen as Student (uncredited)
See also
editReferences
editExternal links
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