Why Take Chances? (Safety at Play)

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Why Take Chances? (Safety at Play) is a short film from 1952 released on 16mm. It is held in the Prelinger Archives collection.

Why Take Chances? was a sequel to Sid Davis' very successful picture Live and Learn (1951), another safety film for children that used bluntly forceful simulated accidents to show the results of carelessness.

Why Take Chances? (Safety at Play)
Produced byDavis (Sid) Productions
Production
company
Davis (Sid) Productions
Distributed byDavis (Sid) Productions
Release date
1952
Running time
10:00
LanguageEnglish
Thumbnail
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More Details

Person:Sid Davis - child actor, stand-in for John Wayne, mountain climber and movie producer - made more than 100 films about dangers that befall children and teenagers, including accidents, narcotics, sexual transgression and psychological stress. Danger always lurks in the placid Southern California landscapes of his films, but as in many safety films, the fascination of danger and misbehavior often tends to distract from the intended cautionary messages.

One doesn't always have to reject Davis' messages or doubt his sincerity in producing these films, but the films do tend to stimulate many different readings.

One not-so-obvious issue I think was on his mind was the effect of rapid urbanization and population growth in the Los Angeles area after World War II (Davis himself had first settled in Los Angeles in 1926), when neighborhoods with a small-town feeling became quickly amalgamated into an almost-endless big city. In such an ugly city, "dangerous strangers" lurked everywhere, waiting to turn good girls into bad girls, to corrupt and injure youth. The postwar landscape and composition of LA � new neighborhoods, construction sites, backyards littered with obsolete prewar refrigerators � also formed a matrix of risks for children, a map of exposures to jeopardy and danger. Considering this, many of his films (including, certainly Why Take Chances) can be seen as protests against what the newer Los Angeles had become and as attempts to draw new boundaries for children.

Davis received many awards from criminal justice and youth organizations and distributed his own films from 1948 through the early 1980s with great success. He is an excellent example of the self-taught entrepreneur who entered the educational film business after World War II, set up a vertically integrated organization, and helped to define the nature of the audiovisual material that postwar kids saw in school. His first film (The Dangerous Stranger, 1948), a film warning kids against potential molesters, was made with funds supplied by John Wayne, cost a thousand dollars to make, and sold thousands of prints since at that time it filled a unique niche.

Kind of a follow-up to Live and Learn -- with more kids getting burned, crushed, and battered -- though nowhere near as entertaining. Boy with bandaged forehead; children playing touch football; boy runs into goal post and hits his head; falling down theatrically; child holds his head and writhes in pain on the ground; art stills of person hitting their head on a pole;