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In the Custody of Strangers

In the Custody of Strangers (1982)

May. 26,1982
|
6.4
| Drama TV Movie

A teenage delinquent who goes on a drunken joyride is left in jail overnight by his parents in the hope that he might learn a lesson from it. But events follow which result in the boy spending far longer behind bars than anyone had foreseen.

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Reviews

CheerupSilver
1982/05/26

Very Cool!!!

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TinsHeadline
1982/05/27

Touches You

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SoTrumpBelieve
1982/05/28

Must See Movie...

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Dana
1982/05/29

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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tigerandcamille
1982/05/30

We came across this on Netflix and finally watched it. It's worth a watch for the laughs. Martin Sheen is over the top with his acting, of course. Emilio tried to be a tough guy but this was no Mighty Ducks. In the drunken driving scene (with the hood up), he amazingly drives on the sidewalk and makes it back to the street until he hits a police car at a donut shop. Warden Caruso has a humorous soft spot for Danny. He just wants this kid out of his jail and there is nothing he can do. That is except carry him out of solitary confinement when the guards refuse to call him at home at Danny's request. Danny Boy is losing his mind after weeks in his own cell. If only he hadn't talked to the man hitting on him in his own holding cell through the bars. Now his life has turned into a month long nightmare.

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donaldgilbert
1982/05/31

Falling right in line with the others that have reviewed this TV-movie, I would agree that it contained fine performances by M. Sheen, and most of the principles. The script was also decent- not great but decent.My biggest complaint is with the way Danny's character was portrayed. I get it- a good kid/bad kid. It's just that Emelio Estivez didn't sell me that he was either a bad kid nor a damaged kid from the jail time. Eyes rolling over his "crime scene" and his final scene. I don't blame the actor- I blame the director; either way, he seemed like a caricature.Still, a modest recommendation.

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axlrhodes
1982/06/01

Martin Sheen is such a strong actor that he capable of lifting even the most mediocre of films.Im not saying that In The Custody Of Strangers is a bad film,on the contrary it is a good compact story with a strong message aimed at youngsters about the cause and effect of juvenile delinquency.The casting of Sheen and Estevez as father and son adds resonance to the story and helps lift the project above the level it would have otherwise have been at.A lot about the film has dated,the cheesy rock soundtrack featuring Billy Idol and the like traps it in its time but the message hasn't aged,do wrong,and you will open yourself up to having your life turned on its head.

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Pepper Anne
1982/06/02

Without reading the synopsis on the video box, this may, at first glance, look like a movie about a rough kid who gets into trouble one too many times, and is likely to indulge more than he ought to and really find himself in trouble. This movie is less about the problems of a misguided youth and more about the problems of a cumbersome, inadequate legal system.Young Emilio Esteves plays a small town teen who's father has been laid off and can't find work. His mother (Jane Alexander) works in order to provide for the family of five. Esteves, frustrated with the town, tries to get work or leave the town to find a decent job, but often butts heads with his father (played well by real-life dad, Martin Sheen), who's staunch perception that allowing his son to go to work is a threat to his masculinity. In other words, a father should provide for the family, not his wife, and certainly not the boy. So, the teen and his father are at odds a lot, and as a result, the teen indulges in a lot of trouble, particularly a night of joyriding drunk and hitting a police car, which is what lands him in trouble. The dad supposes that maybe a night in jail is just what the kid needs to straighten up, but who would've thought that it would turn out to be six weeks? Every time the parents turn around to try and get their son released from prison (he was held in an adult prison, but under law had to remain confined to his own cell and out of contact with other adult prisoners), it's one thing or another preventing their efforts. Delayed court dates, delayed psychological examinations, holidays, weekends, switched judges due to illnesses, you name it. And eventually, it starts to wear down on the teen. And it's done in a way where you feel just as confined in a little eight by eight cell as the movie rolls along. For the teen, the isolation and minute confinement proves too much and is more punishment than he deserves (he was being held for assault and battery of two inmates). And it looks like everyone is helpless for the teen, leading to quite detrimental physical and psychological results. The point is best expressed at the end: they had the kid for six weeks, and no one could help him in that time. He just sat in this cell and in the end, became suicidal and real high-strung, and in all that time, not one person could help him out since they obviously couldn't manage to expedite his release. These are the effects of a cumbersome and inefficient "justice" system. According to the movie, these are fictional characters, but the movie is based on real results. Though, I think it makes a statement about the juvenille detention system at large, not just some kid confined to a cell after a lot of bureacratic tug-of-rope. It is that a system this overcrowded and inefficient cannot possibly be expected to effectively help anyone. No wonder recidivism rates are so high. It also comments on the inability of working class parents to b expected by the state to be effective parents to these kids while trying to earn a living at the same time. That's not to say that the teen's parents weren't effective, but they were both trying to get work, and were met with much difficulty in a period of immense economic difficulty (i.e. The Regan Years). This was a family dependent on the longevity of the steel mills and such. When one parent was out of state looking for a job to provide his family, and a mother was requesting that her son be released into her custody, they told the mother it wasn't likely that she could be an effective guardian to the teen simply because she had to work and couldn't be there to watch him ALL the time. That's a reinforcement to central concern about, if the people that these kids know can't help him, how is the system going to do any better.

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