She's Out of Control

She's Out of Control(1989)

PG
04/14/1989 (US)Comedy, Romance1h 37m
5.2

"Girls go wild, boys go crazy, and dads go nuts!"

Overview

A Los Angeles radio-station manager's girlfriend shows his teenage daughter how to be sexy.

Stan Dragoti

Director

Michael J. Nathanson

Writer

Seth Winston

Writer

Where to Watch

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Powered by JustWatch

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Media

She's Out of Control (1989) 35mm film trailer, flat open matte overscan, 2160p

She's Out of Control (1989) 35mm film trailer, flat open matte overscan, 2160p

Trailer

She's Out Of Control (1989)

She's Out Of Control (1989)

Trailer

Katie's New Boyfriend

Katie's New Boyfriend

Clip

Doug and Katie Have 'The Talk'

Doug and Katie Have 'The Talk'

Clip

Day At The Beach

Day At The Beach

Clip

Katies MANY Suitors

Katies MANY Suitors

Clip

Katie's Big Makeover

Katie's Big Makeover

Clip

Social

W
A review by Wuchak
6.0

Written on December 2, 2020

_**Laugh with it, don’t psychoanalyze it**_

A widower (Tony Danza) manages a radio station and takes care of his two girls. As he’s away on business, his girlfriend (Catherine Hicks) gives his nerdy 15 year-old daughter (Ami Dolenz) a makeover. When the dad returns home his daughter is no longer a girl, but a blossoming woman who’s attracting males left and right. Wallace Shawn plays a successful psychologist.

"She’s Out of Control" (1989) is a coming of age dramedy that pokes fun at several things: The loving father who’s overly concerned about his daughter’s honor, a girl’s discovery of her womanly powers, self-help authors who supposedly have everything figured out, and the challenging relationship between the daughter’s boyfriend and her father .

The title isn’t “false advertising” because everything’s told from the perspective of the protagonist, which is Danza’s character. To HIM, she is out of control. Speaking of Danza, he has John Ritter’s likable charm and easily carries the movie.

Dolenz was 18 during shooting and is serviceable as the title character, but she got better in such roles as she aged, as witnessed in “Pumpkinhead II: Blood Wings” (1993). The film would’ve been more successful if they casted a more iconic 80’s actress in the role (although I’m glad Molly Ringwald didn’t play the part, probably because she was too old by 1988 when the film was shot). On the other side of the gender spectrum, Dana Ashbrook stands out as rockin’ loner Joey.

The main reason I was interested in seeing this flick was because Siskel & Ebert tore it to pieces on their show. Gene even said he considered quitting his job because of it. Seriously? It’s a cute high school comedy focusing on a father’s amusing travails, not frickin’ “Gandhi.” Meanwhile, in Ebert’s review, he laughably psychoanalyzed the dad’s attitude toward his daughter as “perverse,” “sick” and “sexual.” Really? All movies exaggerate reality to some degree, especially farces like this one. ALL fathers of nubile daughters can relate to his situation to some degree, even though it’s amusingly EXAGGERATED.

The movie runs 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot in the Los Angeles area (South Pasadena, Malibu, Huntington Park, Downey, Oxnard and Hollywood).

GRADE: B-