
1951
Marty, a "good boy," experiments with marijuana and experiences "profound mental and emotional disturbances." As in all anti-drug films of this vintage, marijuana leads straight to "H," and Marty's decline continues until he is busted, rehabbed and reformed. Drug Addiction's stilted view of the urban drug culture and unrealistic portrayals of stoned slackers make it entertaining viewing today. It belongs to that little-known "second wave" of anti-drug films, the postwar scare stories about middle-class kids overcome by junkiedom. What this wave of films reveals is that drugs were an issue for white adolescents long before the psychedelic Sixties, and that the official response to the threat expressed a general, not specifically targeted paranoia.

John Galvarro
Marty Malone

James Brill
Narrator

Woodstock

Last Fast Ride: The Life, Love and Death of a Punk Goddess

AKA Tommy Chong

Meth Storm

Seattle is Dying

Dosed

Relentless

Run for Your Life!

Mr. Untouchable

Love in the Time of Fentanyl

Wastings & Pain

George Clinton: Tales of Dr Funkenstein

Hometown: A Portrait of the American Opioid Epidemic

Super High Me

Cocaine Cowboys

Coming Back for More

Ludacris - The Red Light District

The Police Tapes

The Fight for the Soul of Seattle

Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy