scrobble.life
← All reviews
Movie

Film Review: Reefer Madness (1936)

Review by @drax · 1088d · of Reefer Madness

(source: tmdb.org

History can play ironic games with certain films, making them important and infamous for reasons far or completely opposite from their authors’ intentions. One of the most celebrated examples is provided by Reefer Madness, a 1936 drama directed by Louis J. Gasnier. Initially an obscure exploitation film, it later earned cult status as an unintentional comedy.

The plot begins with a lecture by Dr Alfred Carroll (played by Josef Forte), a high school principal who, during a PTA meeting, warns parents about the dangers of a powerful mind-altering and crime-inducing drug called “marihuana”. To illustrate his point, he recounts a sensational criminal case through flashbacks.

Mae Colman (played by Thelma White) and her boyfriend Jack Perry (played by Carleton Young) are a pair of marihuana dealers who conduct their business in their flat, luring customers with parties involving swing music and dancing. Their regular customers include university dropout Ralph Wiley (played by Dave O’Brien) and his girlfriend Blanche (played by Lillian Miles), who often introduce others to “reefer” for the first time. Jack’s new customers also include secondary school students, much to Mae’s dismay due to her concerns about the drug’s effects on impressionable minds. These fears are justified when secondary school pupil Jimmy Lane (played by Warren McCallum), under the influence of marihuana, causes a pedestrian accident and becomes a target of blackmail by Jack. Jimmy’s best friend Bill Harper (played by Kenneth Craig), a model pupil and accomplished tennis player, is also led astray by Blanche, who seduces him. When Mary Lane (played by Dorothy Short), Jimmy’s sister and Bill’s girlfriend, visits the flat in search of Bill, she too is offered marihuana, setting off a chain of events with violent and tragic consequences.

Few films have had entire mythologies built around them like Reefer Madness. Many cannabis enthusiasts considered Gasnier’s film to be a primary reason why the US Congress passed the Marihuana Tax Act, legislation that outlawed cannabis in the USA and subsequently in the rest of the world for almost a century. In reality, the passage of the Act was more influenced by business interests opposed to the hemp industry and moral panic in the mainstream media. Reefer Madness was a low-budget production made outside the mainstream Classic Hollywood studio system and not bound by the strict censorship of the MPAA Production Code, which prohibited the mention and depiction of illegal drugs on screen. The film was so obscure that various sources cite different years for its production or initial release; some claim 1936, while the Internet Movie Database mentions 1938, a year after the Act (potentially due to re-distribution under various titles like Tell Your Children, Doped Youth, and The Burning Question).

Regardless, the film had little impact on public consciousness or government policy and was largely forgotten until 1972 when Keith Stroup, a cannabis legalisation activist, rediscovered it in the Library of Congress. Realising it had no copyright, he began showing it on university campuses to mock anti-cannabis legislation. Reefer Madness gained popularity as a “midnight movie” and a “so bad it’s good” masterpiece, with its title becoming a catchphrase describing moral panics and the absurdities of anti-cannabis policies. In 1998, it was adapted into a stage musical, later adapted for television in 2005.

Critics who label Reefer Madness as a “propaganda film” may find valid arguments to support their claim. The script by Arthur Hearl is indeed preachy, attempting to convey the message about the dangers of cannabis use with the subtlety of a bull in a china shop. The portrayal of the “devil weed” leading individuals to debauchery, violence, and insanity, while immortalised in the infamous piano-playing scene, lacks nuance. However, claims that Reefer Madness is one of the worst films ever made are exaggerated. Director Louis J. Gasnier is a significant figure in cinema history, being one of the pioneers of French cinema who later transitioned to a successful career in early Hollywood with the popular film serial Perils of Pauline. By the 1930s, he found himself working on Poverty Row, a low-budget independent studio like the one producing this film. Despite technical and budget constraints, Gasnier did a commendable job, maintaining a good pace and keeping the running time short to prevent even the most critical viewers from becoming bored. Gasnier also allowed some exploitation content to slip through, including scenes involving sexual activity and rape, which, though mild by today’s standards, were unprecedented in mainstream films under the Hays Code.

The relatively unknown cast delivered solid performances, with Dave O’Brien (who later became an accomplished television writer) perhaps going a bit overboard in his portrayal of an increasingly insane dope fiend. Viewed from an ironic distance, Reefer Madness is an entertaining film that offers insight into a time when social norms differed significantly from today’s, highlighting the hostility towards new or unconventional phenomena and associated lifestyles. If you were to replace the word “marihuana” with terms like “crypto”, “TikTok”, or “free speech on the Internet”, one could easily envisage this film being made in contemporary times.

RATING: 6/10 (++)

Blog in Croatian https://draxblog.com Blog in English https://draxreview.wordpress.com/ Leofinance blog https://leofinance.io/@drax.leo

Unstoppable Domains: https://unstoppabledomains.com/?ref=3fc23fc42c1b417 Hiveonboard: https://hiveonboard.com?ref=drax Bitcoin Lightning HIVE donations: https://v4v.app/v1/lnurlp/qrcode/drax Rising Star game: https://www.risingstargame.com?referrer=drax 1Inch: https://1inch.exchange/#/r/0x83823d8CCB74F828148258BB4457642124b1328e

BTC donations: 1EWxiMiP6iiG9rger3NuUSd6HByaxQWafG ETH donations: 0xB305F144323b99e6f8b1d66f5D7DE78B498C32A7

Simple Posted with Ecency footer

Comments · 1

  • @rafzat(71)· 1088d

    I think this movie will be one of those evergreen movies since we can replace some words we have then with the ones we have now