This is NOT a film that would ever be mistaken for an episode of "Masterpiece Theater"! In fact, in many ways it's a sensationalistic piece of junk...but also a very well-made and entertaining piece of junk! In the 1950s, there were a ton of women in prison films and this might just rank among the best. Part of the reason for this being better than average is the excellent cast. Ida Lupino is a treat to watch as a sadistic warden who is more screwed up and vile than the inmates! And, among the inmates are such colorful dames as Jan Sterling, Cleo Moore, Audrey Totter and Phyllis Thaxter.
The film begins with a lady (Thaxter) being sent to lady for accidentally killing a child due to her negligent driving. Thaxter is emotionally fragile and the prison doctor is concerned about her. However, the warden is insistent that Thaxter be broken just like the rest of the prisoners and pushes the woman to a mental breakdown. In fact, throughout the film Lupino pushes the prisoners to near-riot and she seems to have people skills that would make Attila the Hun seem like a member of the Peace Corps by comparison! There's a lot more to the film--but I don't want to spoil the suspense.
The bottom line is that the film is highly entertaining by being unapologetically loud and over the top. Sensational but far from subtle--this is a great guilty pleasure.
Women's Prison
1955
Action / Crime / Drama / Film-Noir
Women's Prison
1955
Action / Crime / Drama / Film-Noir
Plot summary
During the 1950s, two women inmates are sent to a maximum security state prison. One of the two women is a repeat offender who knows many of the inmates and guards at the prison. She almost feels like returning home to her prison family. The other woman is a decent person, a first-time offender who's no criminal.She unintentionally killed a child in a car accident. She's very young, married, and is terrified of being in prison. Her mental state is very fragile. The women's prison is adjacent to the men's prison. The two prisons are separated by a high wall but there are secret ways of crossing from one prison into the other. Warden Brock is in charge of the men's prison while Amelia van Zandt is the heartless brutal director of the women's prison. The guards are severe and not very friendly, since, they too, fear the wrath of their female warden van Zandt. The only ray of hope and decency in this earthly inferno is the prison doctor, Dr. Crane. However, the good doctor has little power or say in the daily running of the prison.He tries as much as possible to protect his patients, the most vulnerable of all inmates. In this human hell, the two new arrivals, housewife Helene Jensen and forger Brenda Martin, must survive. Prison newbie Helene Jensen decides to stick close to veteran jail-bird Brenda Martin in order to learn the ropes of prison life but this might just not be enough to ensure Helene's survival.
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Highly entertaining junk...
"Make trouble, you get trouble..."
The title pretty much says it all, and conveys what the viewer might expect to see in a low budget feature like this one from the 1950's. Ida Lupino stars as the tough minded, non-compassionate superintendent of a woman's prison, in a picture that starts out fairly mundane but gets rolling with all manner of evil machinations on the part of Van Zandt (Lupino). The core stories involve a housewife serving a manslaughter sentence for the accidental death of a young girl, and a female prisoner who gets pregnant by her husband during a surreptitious visit from the men's side of the prison. Should tell you what kind of a life this kid would have had.
To say there are plot holes and continuity problems galore here would be an understatement. As if to underscore the point, I got a kick out of the conversation between the two prison matrons about half way through the movie, when Miss Saunders (Mae Clarke) states she likes to pick out the flaws in prison movies. I came up with a bunch without even trying. First off, when inmate Brenda (Jan Sterling) dropped the newly laundered and pressed clothes upon discovering Joan and Glen in the storeroom, she picks up a pile of completely disheveled garments as if they just came out of a dryer! Secondly, soon after Brenda burns her hand intentionally in the clothes press, she's shown helping Joan get to her feet after she faints, and her hand clearly shows no injury. Later on in the story, when Dr. Crane (Howard Duff) goes looking for Van Zandt, he wakes up a woman prisoner who tells him that the inmates have taken over - how did she know that if she was sleeping?
A break before I continue. Though she didn't have a large role, Vivian Marshall was entertaining as the would be Shakespearean actress doing Bette Davis and Talullah Bankhead impressions. That was a clever set up for her to imitate the voices of Matron Sturges and Van Zandt later in the flick when all heck is about to break loose.
Back to the goofy stuff. How was it that after only one day in jail, Dr. Crane tells Helene Jensen that he'll bring her three letters from her husband. And after she's read them, he'll exchange them for three more! That Mr. Jensen sure must have liked to write!
I don't even want to get into how easily Glen Burton (Warren Stevens) managed to make his way from the men's prison to the women's side at will. You'd think that after the first time, the warden would have put a tail on him to figure out how he did it, instead of relying on Van Zandt to beat it out of the Mrs. By the time Burton whips out a gun during the hectic finale, it looks like one of the more believable elements of the story.
But you know, even with all this nonsense going on, the story managed to keep my interest during it's entire hour and a half run. Each of the characterizations, even the minor roles was entertaining. It was worth it to get to the point where Crane orders the straight jacket for Van Zandt as she's about to take off for la-la land.
OK, two more. How is it that Jensen, serving one to ten for that manslaughter charge gets released after about the two weeks of the film's story?
And the name of the black woman prisoner in the role call - O'Shaughnessy???
Not "Caged" But Good On Its Own Terms
Ida Lupino gets one of her juiciest roles here. It may not be one of her subtlest but she gets to sink her teeth into it. She is the conniving, heartless, loveless warden of the title institution.
The inmates include blowzy dames from various studios. It's a great cast. We have Jan Sterling, Audrey Totter, and Cleo Moore. Moore is sans Hugo Haas.
It's a trifle hard to believe the plot. A co-ed prison where the women are abused. But though it may not be terribly cogent, it's strong. It's forceful.
Early in the movie Juanita Hall, playing a character named Polly, is introduced. She says she was named after the hospital where she was born: Polyclinic. Hey, I was born there, too. Maybe I should have been named Clint.
Watch this one. It's not campy. It can be taken very seriously. But it's also fun to see all these dolls cracking wise and playing tough.