| Jail Bait | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | Ed D. Wood, Jr. |
| Produced by | Edward D. Wood Jr |
| Written by | Alex Gordon Ed D. Wood, Jr. |
| Starring | Timothy Farrell Dolores Fuller Clancy Malone Herbert Rawlinson Steve Reeves Lyle Talbot |
| Music by | Hoyt Kurtain |
| Cinematography | William C. Thompson |
| Editing by | Charles Clement Igo Kantor |
| Distributed by | Howco Productions Inc. |
| Release date(s) | May 12, 1954 (1954-05-12) |
| Running time | 72 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | US$22,000 |
Jail Bait is a 1954 American crime film directed by Ed Wood, with a screenplay by Wood and Alex Gordon. The film stars Timothy Farrell as a gangster who undergoes plastic surgery to elude the police. Famed bodybuilder Steve Reeves made his first screen appearance in the film.
Contents |
Don Gregor, the son of a plastic surgeon, is jailed by the police for carrying an unlicensed handgun. Inspector Johns and Lt. Lawrence suspect he is an associate of gangster Vic Brady. Don’s sister Marilyn bails her brother out of jail, and the siblings agree to keep their father uninformed about Don’s indiscretions. Dr. Gregor is aware of his son’s secret life, but believes Don is a good person and that everything will “straighten itself out nicely.”
Brady plans to rob a theater. Don is reluctant to become involved but is bullied into participating by Brady. During the robbery, Don kills a night watchman and Brady wounds the theater’s bookkeeper. The two crooks get away with the theater’s payroll. but Brady senses Don is having second thoughts about his involvement. Fearing Don will turn himself in to the police, Brady kills him and stuffs his body into a closet.
In order to elude the police, Brady decides to undergo plastic surgery. He contacts Dr. Gregor, telling him he is holding his son hostage until plastic surgery is completed. Dr. Gregor begins the surgery in Brady‘s apartment, but discovers his son’s corpse in the closet. He controls himself, and completes the surgery. Two weeks later, Brady’s bandages are removed, and, to the everyone‘s horror and amazement, Brady’s facial features are exactly those of Don‘s. The police arrive with the theater bookkeeper who identifies “Don” as the man who killed the night watchman. Brady makes a break for it, but dies in a shoot-out with the police.
The film was inspired by producer Edward Small’s 1935 ‘’Let ‘Em Have It’’ which told the story of a gangster undergoing plastic surgery to elude the police. ’’Jail Bait’’ was originally titled ‘’The Hidden Face’’. Herbert Rawlinson (whose role was originally intended for Bela Lugosi) died the night after shooting the film (Grey 201).
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