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Films about juvenile delinquency (1 C, 73 P) Pages in category "Teen crime films" The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total.
Films about juvenile delinquency, the act of participating in unlawful behavior as a minor or an individual younger than the statutory age of majority. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
15 to Life: Kenneth's Story is a Canadian-American documentary film, directed by Nadine Pequeneza and released in 2014. [1]The film centres on 26-year-old Kenneth Young, a Florida man who has been serving four consecutive sentences of life in prison since 2001, for participating in three armed robberies and one attempted armed robbery, over a 30-day period, as a 14-year-old in the summer of 2000.
Concrete (コンクリート, Konkurīto) is a 2004 independently produced Japanese film that is based on the case of the murder of Junko Furuta.The film deals as much with the social factors that produced Furuta's four assailants as it does with Furuta's suffering at their hands.
Teen-Age Crime Wave (aka Teenage Crime Wave) is a 1955 American juvenile delinquency film noir crime film directed by Fred F. Sears and starring Tommy Cook and Molly McCart. It was released by Columbia Pictures. The plot concerns a pair of delinquent teens who go on a statewide shooting spree after escaping from reform school. [1]
The Violent Years is a 1956 American exploitation film directed by William Morgan and starring Jean Moorhead as Paula Parkins, the leader of a gang of juvenile delinquent high school girls. [2] The film is notable for having an uncredited Ed Wood as the author of its screenplay. [ 3 ]
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The film was inspired by events described in a 1973 San Francisco Examiner article entitled "Mousepacks: Kids on a Crime Spree" by Bruce Koon and James A. Finefrock, which reported on young kids vandalizing property in Foster City, California. [2] The middle class planned community had an unusually high level of juvenile crime.