Schoolgirl Report Part 1 – What Parents Don’t Think Is Possible (1970)
Directors
Schoolgirl Report Part 1: What Parents Don't Think Is PossibleSchulmädchen-Report: Was Eltern nicht für möglich halten
Overview
Mockumentary about German schoolgirls openly talking about their scandalous sexual experiences. Some of these are illustrated through inserted vignettes. Also, a street reporter asks actual common folk about their views on sex.
Trailer
Cast
Günther Kieslich
Wolf Harnisch
Helga Kruck
Peter Dornseif
Marion Haberl
Christina Hoeltel
Claudia Höll
Sandra Kruger
Ruth Küllenberg
Alexander Miller
Gernot Möhner
Gunther Möhner
Gitti Netzle
Mascha Rabben
Karl-Heinz Otto
Wolf Petersen
Roswitha Randl
Waltraud Schaeffler
Manfred Schrott
Michael Schreiner
Gundi Schwöbel
Karin Simsel
Franziska Stömmer
Tonio van der Meden
Hertha von Walther
Susanne Woelfel
Crew
Willi Schwadorf
Walter Boos
Wolf C. Hartwig
Klaus Werner
Eberhard Schröder
Gert Wilden
Ernst Hofbauer
Günther Hunold
Kurt Seelmann
Günther Heller
A mockumentary about German schoolgirls openly talking about their scandalous sexual experiences. Some of these are illustrated through inserted vignettes. Also, a street reporter asks actual common folk about their views on sex.
Also known as: Schulmädchen-Report: Was Eltern nicht für möglich halten, Confessions of a Sixth Form Girl, Erotikes kryfes synantiseis, Las colegialas se confiesan, Rapporto sul comportamento sessuale delle studentesse, Reportage gyro apo tis mathitries, Schoolgirl Report Part 1: What Parents Don’t Think Is Possible, Schulmädchen-Report Was Eltern nicht für möglich halten, Si Papa savait ça!, The School Girls, Ung fri kärlek
Description: A teenage girl is caught petting with the bus driver during an outing. The school’s parent council discusses her punishment. One parent, a psychologist, suggests that her behavior is not abnormal or worthy of expulsion. He describes teen girls’ experiments with sex, and these dramatized vignettes, interspersed with man-in-the-street interviews with young women about their attitudes and experiences, make a case for 60’s generation’s attitude of independence. The girls argue for telling the truth in the face of the post-war German convention. In the end, will Renata be expelled or recognized as a girl from a new era?
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