Sex Madness

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Sex Madness
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DVD cover
Directed by Dwain Esper
Written by Joseph Seiden
Vincent Valentini
Produced by Dwain Esper
StarringVivian McGill
Rose Tapley
Al Rigeli
Stanley Barton
Linda Lee Hill
Release date
  • 1938 (1938)
Running time
52 mins.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Sex Madness (also known as Human Wreckage) [1] [2] is a 1938 American exploitation film directed by Dwain Esper. It is along the lines of Reefer Madness , supposedly to warn teenagers and young adults of the dangers of venereal diseases, specifically syphilis. The film stars Vivian McGill, Rose Tapley, Al Rigeli, Stanley Barton and Linda Lee Hill.

Contents

Plot

Sex Madness
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Opening shot of the film, with the tagline "They Must Be Told" [3]
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Sex Madness title card showing a copyright date of MCMXXXIV (1934).
Sex Madness (1938) - Two Women.JPG
A subplot of the film with lesbianism that involves two secretaries, Peggy and the woman she is trying to seduce, Betty

This exploitation film belongs to the social guidance genre of quasi-documentary narratives, which exhort young adults to follow particular moral and social prescriptions related to sexuality and drug use.

The film centers on Paul Lorenz, a "concerned citizen" alarmed at the spread of venereal diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea. However, at a New York City burlesque show, several protagonists are more intent on engagement in sexual pleasure, regardless of the subsequent costs. They include Paul's own son Tom, burlesque dancer Sheila Wayne (who has syphilis), and two secretaries, lesbian Peggy and Betty, whom she is trying to seduce.

However, one figure is not amongst them—Millicent Hamilton, a reformed former burlesque dancer. Millicent won a beauty contest in her hometown, which led her to New York, but she contracted syphilis after a "casting couch" sexual encounter. Millicent's physician, Dr. Hampton, tells her that her condition can be cured, but only after slow and painstaking treatment; she should reject quick "quack" pseudo-cures. She consents to this, eager to return to her hometown and marry her boyfriend Wendel, but will she heed the doctor's warnings? And what will the consequences be if she does not?

Wild parties, lesbianism, and premarital sex are portrayed or heavily implied in various scenes. The promotion of the film for "educational" purposes allowed it to portray taboo subjects that were otherwise forbidden by the Motion Picture Production Code of 1930, especially after those restrictions were strictly imposed on Hollywood productions after July 1934.

Cast

Production

American film director and author Bret Wood argues in his book, Forbidden Fruit: The Golden Age of the Exploitation Film, that while Dwain Esper is often credited as the director of Sex Madness, he believes that Joseph Seiden is the more likely candidate, [4] and further stated the Internet Movie Database still credits the wrong director on the film. [5] Richard Whittaker of The Austin Chronicle also said there is "a mystery about who directed" the movie. He observed that it has been "attributed in many circles to Dwain Esper"; but without any actual credits included in the film, "it's hard to know definitively." [6]

Release

According to the Motion Picture Association and Production Code Administration records on file with the movie, the film was denied release by censorship boards in New York, Pennsylvania and Kansas. [7]

In Ohio, the censorship board approved the film for release after removing scenes and dialogue they found objectionable. The content they removed included a scene in which "one girl strokes another's arms in a suggestive manner" and the dialogue that went with the scene: "You do have plenty of it". In addition, they rejected a close-up shot of "an exposed navel", and the "entire house party sequence." [7]

Reception

Author Tony Nourmand opined that Esper was "a shrewd salesman, who marketed this film as 'educational', thus giving his audience the opportunity to presuade themselves that rather than enjoying a steamy, titillating movie, they were widening their knowledge of an important social issue." [8] Eddie Muller said "Esper created dingy, prurient imagery framed within scripts of fervid moral righteousness; the result was a head-spinning, hellfire-and-brimstone huckster’s stew, just like they served at a carnival geek show." [9]

Professor and author Robert Eberweing observed that "the film is a chaotic mixture of peep show and preachment; and demonstrates most acutely the incompatibility of educational messages and sensationalized treatments of sex for entertainment; the production values of the film are so poor that a shot showing a victim with skin lesions and locomotor ataxia, is actually taken from an earlier silent film and clumsily spliced in as an impossible point-of-view shot." [10]

Film critic Leonard Maltin did not mince words, saying it is "another trashy nugget from schlockmeister Esper, made on a budget of $5.00; in between the moralizing regarding 'the awful truth about social diseases', there are hints of lesbianism and pedophilia; indescribably, hilariously awful." [11] Scott Campbell from Far Out Magazine wrote "attempting to frame itself as a documentary but quite clearly heavily indebted to propaganda more than anything else, it would be safe to say the film did not have the desired effect and swear its target demographic off the idea of wanton copulation." [12]

Legacy

In 2018, the film Sex Madness Revealed, directed by Tim Kirk, was released by Kino Lorber. [13] The film features an audio commentary track over the original film, which features comedian Patton Oswalt and magician and actor Rob Zabrecky telling a fictitious history of the film. [6] It premiered at the 2nd annual Overlook Film Festival, in New Orleans, Louisiana, in April 2018. [13] The film was written by Kirk and Patrick Cooper. [13] Bill Arceneaux from Film Threat opined "worth a chuckle here and there, Sex Madness Revealed starts clever and fun but ends painted into a corner of its own making." [14] The film was released on Blu-ray in May 2019, with commentary by Kirk and Cooper about the making of the movie. [15]

See also

References

  1. Schaefer, Eric (2007). "Exploitation Films: Teaching Sin in the Suburbs". Cinema Journal . 47 (1): 96. doi:10.1353/cj.2007.0059. ISSN   0009-7101. JSTOR   30132001.
  2. "More Human Wreckage". Detroit Free Press . No. 198. November 18, 1938. p. 17.
  3. "Human Wreckage". The Times (Movie advertisement featuring the tagline). Vol. 56, no. 187. May 21, 1938. p. 12.
  4. Pinkerton, Nick (Summer 2020). "Cautionary Tales". Sight and Sound . Vol. 30, no. 6. pp. 126–127. ISSN   0037-4806.
  5. O'Donoghue, Darragh; Wood, Bret (2020). "Biting the 'Forbidden Fruit' of Exploitation Film: An Interview with Bret Wood". Cinéaste . Vol. 46, no. 1. p. 65. ISSN   0009-7004. JSTOR   26976466.
  6. 1 2 Whittaker, Richard (September 13, 2018). "The Dirty Secrets Behind Sex Madness Revealed". The Austin Chronicle . Archived from the original on November 7, 2025.
  7. 1 2 American Film Institute. "Sex Madness". AFI Catalog of Feature Films . Archived from the original on April 2, 2014.
  8. Nourmand, Tony (2006). Hajiani, Roxanna (ed.). Film Posters Exploitation. Köln: Evergreen. p. 78. ISBN   3-8228-5625-8.
  9. Muller, Eddie (1996). Grindhouse: The Forbidden World of Adults Only Cinema. New York: St. Martins Press. p. 21. ISBN   0-312-14609-4.
  10. Eberwein, Robert T. (1999). "The Initial Phase, 1914-1939". Sex Ed: Film, Video, And The Framework Of Desire. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. p. 41. ISBN   0-8135-2636-1.
  11. Maltin, Leonard (2015). Turner Classic Movies Presents Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide. East Rutherford: Penguin Books. p. 1458. ISBN   978-0-698-19729-9.
  12. Campbell, Scott (December 30, 2023). "'Sex Madness': The weirdest moral panic movie of all time". Far Out Magazine. Archived from the original on November 7, 2025.
  13. 1 2 3 Coviello, Will (April 18, 2018). "Sex Madness Revealed and The Overlook Film Festival". The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate . Archived from the original on November 7, 2025.
  14. Arceneaux, Bill (April 21, 2018). "Sex Madness Revealed". Film Threat . Archived from the original on May 15, 2025.
  15. Rizzo III, Francis (June 14, 2019). "Sex Madness Revealed". DVD Talk . Archived from the original on April 15, 2024.