Wild in the Streets

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Wild in the Streets

Movie Poster
Directed by Barry Shear
Produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff
James H. Nicholson
Written by Robert Thom
Starring Christopher Jones
Shelley Winters
Richard Pryor
Diane Varsi
Hal Holbrook
Music by Les Baxter
Distributed by MGM Pictures
Release date(s) May 29, 1968
Running time 94 min.
Language English
Budget $1,000,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

Wild in the Streets was a popular 1968 movie, produced and released by American International Pictures, and based on a short story by writer Robert Thom. The movie has become a cult classic, since its initial release.

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Christopher Jones stars, as aspiring singer (and underground rebel) Max Frost, whose band The Troopers (all living together with him, their women, and hangers-on) include his 15-year-old genius attorney Billy Cage (Kevin Coughlin) on lead guitar, ex-child actor/girlfriend Sally LeRoy (Diane Varsi) on keyboards, hook-handed Abraham Salteen (Larry Bishop) on bass guitar and trumpet, and anthropologist Stanley X (Richard Pryor) on drums.

When Max is asked to sing at a televised political rally by Senate candidate Johnny Fergus (Hal Holbrook), who's running on a platform to lower the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen (a genuine issue, not passed until 1971 as the Twenty-sixth Amendment), he and the Troopers appear—but Max stuns everyone by calling instead for the voting age to become fourteen, then finishes the show with an improvised song, "Fourteen Or Fight!", and a call for a demonstration.

Max's fans (and other young people, by the thousands) stir to action, and within twenty-four hours fourteen-or-fight protests have begun in cities around the United States. Fergus's advisors want him to denounce Max, but instead he agrees to support the demonstrations, and change his campaign—if Max and his group will compromise, accept a voting age of fifteen instead, abide by the law, and appeal to the demonstrators to go home peaceably. Max agrees, and the two appear together on television, and in person the next day using the mantra "Fifteen and Ready".

Most states agree to lower the voting age within days, in the wake of the demonstrations, and Max Frost and the Troopers campaign for Johnny Fergus until the election, which he wins by a landslide. Taking his place in the US Senate, Fergus wishes Frost and his people would now just go away, but instead they get involved with Washington politics. When a Congressman from Sally LeRoy's home district dies suddenly, the band enters her in the special election that follows, and she's voted into Congress by the new teen bloc.

The first bill Sally introduces is a Constitutional amendment to lower the age requirements for national political office—to fourteen, and "Fourteen Or Fight!" enters a new phase. A joint session of Congress is called, and the Troopers (by now joined by Fergus's son Jimmy, played by Michael Margotta) swing the vote their way by spiking the Washington water supply with LSD (a considered threat, actually attempted in the late 1960s), and providing all the Senators and Representatives with teenaged escorts.

As teens either take over or threaten the reins of government, the Old Guard (those over thirty) turn to Max to run for President, and assert his (their) control over the changing tide. Max again agrees, running as a Republican to his chagrin, but once in office, he turns the tide on his older supporters. Thirty becomes a mandatory retirement age, while those over thirty-five are rounded up, sent to "re-education camps", and permanently dosed on LSD. Fergus unsuccessfully attempts to dissuade Max by contacting his estranged parents (wheelchair-bound Barry Freed and overbearing Shelley Winters), then tries to assassinate him. Failing at this, he flees Washington with his remaining family, but they are soon rounded up.

With youth now in control of America, politically as well as economically, and similar revolutions breaking out in all the world's major countries, Max withdraws the military from around the world (turning them instead into de facto age police), puts computers and prodigies in charge of the Gross National Product, ships surplus grain for free to third world nations, disbands the FBI and Secret Service, and becomes the leader of "the most truly hedonistic society the world has ever known". All seems well... but youth proves to be restless, as Max (and the audience) discovers at the conclusion.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • The original magazine short story, titled "The Day it All Happened, Baby!" was expanded by its author to book length, and was published as a paperback novel by Pyramid Books.
  • Bon Jovi also released an unrelated song titled "Wild in the Streets".

[edit] See also