Our films are almost exclusively drawn from our collection of over 50,000 16mm prints of animation, commercials, educational films, feature films, movie trailers, medical, industrial military, news out-takes and every genre in between. We’re actively working to present rarely screened genres of cinema as well as avant-garde and ethno-cultural documentaries, which expand the boundaries of cinema. Oddball Films is the largest film archive in Northern California and one of the most unusual private collections in the US. We invite you to join us in our weekly offerings of offbeat cinema.
Oddball Films and curator Kat Shuchter present Learn your Lesson...from the 1950s - An Old-Fashioned Shockucation, the sixteenth in a series of programs highlighting the most ridiculous, insane and camptastic educational films, mental hygiene primers and TV specials of the collection. This month we're taking the way-way back machine to the 1950s to learn lessons in drinking and driving, bullying, cheating, sex, prejudice, child molestation, anger management and of course atomic fallout! Watch mice get drunk and drunks flip cars in the teen drunk driving cautionary tale None for the Road (1957). The school scofflaw, Chick Allen, can't wait to sully the school carnival in The Bully (1951). Chart the sexual development of two young people before their eventual marriage in The Social Sex Attitudes in Adolescence (1953), including segments on nocturnal emissions and homosexuality. In What About Prejudice? (1959) everybody in class has it out for the faceless minority student for a variety of terrible reasons, until he steps up and saves a classmate's life and ends up in the hospital; let's hope it's not too late to change their attitudes. Shockmeister Sid Davis want little boys to be on the look-out for the ever-present threat of pedophiles; you too should steer clear of The Dangerous Stranger (1950). Nothing's more delightful than little children screaming at each other and throwing things, but we've got tips on controlling their volatile little tempers in Don't Get Angry (1953). John Taylor thinks he's got it all figured out; copying answers off his friend's paper, but when word gets around, he loses all his friends and his seat on student council, all over a little Cheating (1952). And since it is the 1950s, learn how to react when our red enemies drop the big one on your town in the howlingly funny Pattern for Survival (1950), whatever you do, don't look at the light! Plus, shocking excerpts from shop-safety film It Didn't Have to Happen (1951), dolls on fire in Fire! Patty Learns What to Do (1951), and for the delusional: Facing Reality (1959). Get here early for Ulcer at Work (1957) because we're already 60 years late to learn these lessons.
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None for the Road (B+W, 1957)
"Jerry Landon is one of the types that experiments with drinking... The all-out type"
A good old-fashioned drunk driving scare film replete with a white-coater injecting lab rats with alcohol and making them do acrobatics! The story centers around 3 couples at a sock-hop; the girls are all drinking ginger ale, Keith has had a couple of beers and Jerry has been "holding down the fort" all night and gotten himself blotto. When he gets in a fight with his gal Eydie, Jerry storms off for his car. Can Keith catch up to him and make sure he makes it home alive, or will Keith's couple of beers mean the end for him and his passengers? See who makes it out alive!
Lorne Greene, of Bonanza fame, narrates this quintessential 1950s sex education film caught between old fashioned modesty around s-e-x and the emerging openness of post-war youth. The film charts the sexual development of Bob and Mary as they grow from boy and girl to husband and wife, including a bizarre aside concerning the homosexual “phase.”
"Good sex adjustment began for Mary when she was young." But when she was a teen, Mary developed a strong friendship with Lucille. Mary's mother found their "continual intimacy and concentration of affection" unnatural. Next Mary had a crush on the senior girl's tennis champion. Not to fear, the film explains that this was just a stage!
An early Sid Davis gem, this film lets little boys know that molesters are everywhere- and what to do if that nice man offers you a ride. Sid Davis was the grandfather of the shock film, making his first short - reportedly - with a $1,000 given to him by John Wayne and went on to direct and produce hundreds more. One of his favorite preoccupations was the murderous pedophiliac predator, a theme he revisited over half a dozen times from the 1940s-1980s.
Plus shocking excerpts from Facing Reality (1954), It Didn't Have to Happen (1951) and Fire! Patty Learns What to Do (1951).
And For the Early Birds: (starting at 7:45)
Curator’s Biography
Our films are almost exclusively drawn from our collection of over 50,000 16mm prints of animation, commercials, educational films, feature films, movie trailers, medical, industrial military, news out-takes and every genre in between. We’re actively working to present rarely screened genres of cinema as well as avant-garde and ethno-cultural documentaries, which expand the boundaries of cinema. Oddball Films is the largest film archive in Northern California and one of the most unusual private collections in the US. We invite you to join us in our weekly offerings of offbeat cinema.