Birthright (1951) Poster

(1951)

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As An Exploitation Movie It Works
Michael_Elliott1 January 2017
Birthright (1951)

** (out of 4)

Chicken farmer John Lloyd (Boyce Brown) grows tired of his wife and her parents constantly yelling at him and putting him down. He decides to go to town and cool off with some beers but he ends up at the home of a waitress. The next morning John goes back to his wife to live out a perfect life but what he doesn't know is that the waitress had syphilis.

BIRTHRIGHT followed in the footsteps of MOM AND DAD and various other exploitation pictures that were sold to the public as educational pictures but looking back on them now we can see that they were just using that to show "shocking" footage and use frank situations without getting in trouble. Time has also shown that these movies were incredibly popular and made quite a bit of money for their producers who usually did these movies for dimes.

This one here is a pretty bad movie. The acting is laughable. The dialogue is even worse. The entire way the story is presented is rather stupid. The plot is also a mess as they pretty much have every scene run a minute and there's nothing that really connects anything as the film just tries to get the basic points of the film on screen. If we're going to be honest about this movie then there's no question that it's a horrible one. Yet, if you're a fan of these types of movies then you know their technical quality doesn't always reflect the entertainment value.

The entertainment value here is quite high because the story is just so stupid that you can't help but laugh at this poor chicken farm and his "chicken hunting" that gets him into trouble. The movie clocks in at just 51-minutes but half-way through we're given an animated warning sequence on the dangers of syphilis. Then, in the controversial moment, we see an actual live birth of a baby whose mother has the disease. Seeing an actual vagina and an actual birth in 1951 tells you how the producers tries to get people in. Not only that but we get graphic images of what syphilis can do, which is another way this exploitation film worked.

BIRTHRIGHT certainly isn't a good movie. However, as an exploitation film it works and it certainly keeps you entertained throughout its short running time.
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3/10
Watch This, You'll Learn Something and Laugh, Too!
ksam-269458 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
My fourth grade play of Cinderella had better acting than this movie! Not only is the acting very bad, but so is the producing and directing.

The intimate scene between two of the main characters is played by two completely different actors. They don't look anything like the original characters. Talk about confusing to the audience! Another confusing scene is the husband seated in the waiting room while his wife is delivering their baby. The following scene shows a film, or reel of a real life delivery of a breech birthed baby girl. The movie then switches away from the film, back to the wife delivered of her baby, who is a boy!

I'm guessing, during that era, the intimate scene and the breech birth film serve as "stand-ins," sparing the characters any shame that the 1950s audience may cast on them.

This movie's music, and of course the overall message about syphilis are the best things about it. This is not the first of this type of movie I've seen. The number of these socially informative movies that were made makes me wonder just how prevalent VD (gonorrhea and syphilis in particular) really was.
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8/10
A weirdly accurate snapshot of the early 50's South
Woodyanders14 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Chicken farmer John Floyd (likable Boyce Brown) has a one night fling with lonely diner waitress Nell (pretty Paula Haywood). Unfortunately, john contracts syphilis from Nell and subsequently gives it to his pregnant wife Liza (the stilted, yet still earnest Marjory Morris). There's no arguing that the endearingly amateurish acting by a cast of rank nonprofessionals leaves plenty to be desired, but at the same time this oddly works in the film's favor: Although these folks couldn't act their collective way out of a soggy cardboard box, they nonetheless look, sound, and act like the simple small town country folks that they really were. The use of real everyday people to play basically themselves provides a remarkable authenticity that more polished movies with accomplished professional thespians tend to lack: These aren't a bunch of actors and actresses pretending to be average working class Jacks and Jills; instead, it's the genuine article doing their proverbial best to act as well as they possibly can -- and that in turn gives this picture a special kind of appealing verisimilitude. The use of actual existing practical locations, thick regional accents, and overall rough quality of the filmmaking all further enhance this peculiarly convincing sense of realism. An interesting item.
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8/10
Cracker Heaven
lurch-178 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
My guess is that International Harvester sponsored this, because their brand new Internation pick up truck was the best actor in the show.

They sure grow some homely crackers in Georgia. But, Paula Haygood (Hayseed) is definitely a fox. Get ready for the pause button on your DVD player for the very brief nude scene.

The breach birth delivery scene makes up for all else lacking in this public health special - pushing prenatal doctor exams and blood tests.

"Oh honey, we all make mistakes" from the cheated-on-wife is a little hard to swallow.

Definitely worth seeing. On the same DVD with 'Not Wanted' (also named the Wrong Rut), which also has a birthing scene - Caesarian. Shows the slices to the stitches - also worth seeing
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