A married commercial filmmaker is charged with statutory rape when it is revealed that his lover is only 16.A married commercial filmmaker is charged with statutory rape when it is revealed that his lover is only 16.A married commercial filmmaker is charged with statutory rape when it is revealed that his lover is only 16.
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Dendrie Taylor
- Sandi
- (as Dendrie Allyn Taylor)
Jill Sayre
- Teenage Hooker
- (as Jill Freedman)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDendrie Taylor's debut.
- GoofsWhen Marisa goes to the door and sees her father, in the TV version she's wearing a shirt with a collar around her neck. In the close-up reverse angle she's not wearing the shirt, because the same shot was used for the home video version, in which she's topless going to the door.
- Quotes
Marisa Vogel: I am not your wife, I am your DAUGHTER!
- Alternate versionsReleased in 1989 as R-rated home video version, including nudity, as Jailbait: Betrayed by Innocence.
- SoundtracksDon't Stop the Dance
Performed by Bryan Ferry
Featured review
I saw this film when it first was released on television. I thought it was going to be another sensationalist film that blamed the problems of all teenage girls younger than 18 years old on older men and brainwashed the public into believing that all sex crimes against teenage female minors are committed by older men. However, this movie really surprised me in a sense that it distanced itself from any of such tactics. As a matter of fact, this movie even appears to question the fairness of the age of consent laws throughout the United States of America. It was 1986 that this movie was released, which was only a few years after the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children was founded and pedophile panic politics was beginning to become wired into the cultural fabric of American society. Yet this movie stood tall in keeping itself free from any such misleading influences. It was about real people like you and me with real problems. It has been years since I've seen this movie. From what I recall, Barry Botswick plays a 40-something-year-old movie director in Southern California who is married (wife played by Lee Purcell) and has an 18-year-old daughter in college. He has everything to be happy about in life, but his marriage is less than perfect. He meets a young girl (played by Cristen Kauffman), believing that she is over the age of 18. He and this girl eventually become intimate with one another. Unbeknownst to him, this girl is only 16 years old and her father is a cop (played by Paul Sorvino). Her father eventually finds out about the liaison and zeroes in on Barry Botswick, and, boy, does he make a melodramatic entrance upon confronting the 40-something-old man who had bedded his underage daughter and arresting him on charges of statutory rape. It is no secret that the father wants to really put the shaft to the man who messed around with his 16-year-old daughter and send him up the river for a long, long time. Probably most people would think that the father was so immersed in his own rage that he becomes insensitive to his daughter's feelings and her wishes for him to let the matter go, because, after all, nobody put a gun to her head to have sex with this older man despite that she was 2 years shy of the legal age of consent and she shows her maturity upon admitting so. However, you cannot really feel any resentment towards the young girl's father, because you can always see that he just wants to protect his daughter from the ills of the world and defend her honor. At the same time, you know that the 40-something-year-old man who had an affair with the cop's daughter is not a bad person and doesn't even come close to being another Joey Buttafuoco. When the statutory rape trial proceeds, it's like a no- win situation for everyone who is involved. I must admit that despite that this movie was supposed to be about a serious subject, I found myself laughing at a scene in which Barry Botswick goes to the young girl's house after he is released from jail on bond, and he speaks to Paul Sorvino. He says to him, "I know you want to punch me out, but I really need to talk to you." Paul Sorvino then makes a facial expression as though Barry Botswick has just read his mind. If you get the chance to see this movie, do not waste your time on "News At Eleven" starring Martin Sheen, which also came out in 1986 and was also a film with a "statutory rape" scenario. "News At Eleven" makes too much of an effort to put good tags and bad tags on each character. "Betrayed By Innocence" shows both the good points and bad points of each character, including the father of the 16-year-old girl, which is how a movie should be.
- ChromiumVortex
- Jan 2, 2015
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Jailbait: Betrayed by Innocence
- Filming locations
- MacArthur Park, Los Angeles, California, USA(Jogging around river scene)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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