June 2014, I re-watched this and I enjoyed it. I found it saying interesting things about a previous decade that I all but forgotten. It made me go back to the review that I started in 2009 and change it a lot.
October 2021 I watched it again, really okay.
Impure Thoughts is credits listed as 1985 and IMDb listed as 1986. I assume something like completion date versus release date. Not knowing the filming dates, oh so nice to know in features that have a first screen role, that puts AH at around age 11.
This story might not make much sense to anyone who was not in Catholic education in the 1950's and early 1960's. Me, I was in the UK, not that I was the type who did well by it. I can relate to this feature even though my schools were very different with different syllabuses. To me Scapula is from the middle ages only. Sex Ed: in church schools we just got NO, the year group straight after me did better as it became part of the state education syllabus. Like the script, I found the schools to be low quality on religion, but really okay otherwise.
I am not in tune with modern Catholic culture, Christianity now feels not my way, but I found this feature very easy to follow and like. The novel Frost In May, no, by now I find that to be too tragic, though I used to like it, this yes, I like this film.
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Four boys, from the same school, one that caters to the full school age range. St Jude, the patron saint for desperate cases.
This is not fully comedy, they sit at a table in a purgatory waiting room and look back on their lives, but it does have a light tone. It is a warm view.
My DVD cover gives a misleading idea about any sex parts in Impure Thoughts.
My DVD is 4x3, likely the original image format. It is a blatantly low production budget. To me this is a real historic feature. It is also available on YouTube.
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Alyson Hannigan. She plays the little sister of the younger male.
Most of the school action shows the older ones so she is not there, the credits list her as a student at the school.
40 minutes in she is there, blatantly comedy AH, preparing for the school dance, then arriving at the dance. It is the chapter that the DVD calls Sister Joan.