Most yearn to finish education to have a guaranteed successful future. This is absolutely true however the path to a great and successful education may not come as easy to other people, especially the young ones struggling with life. This is not the case for the students featured in the documentary "The Bad Kids."
In the ideal world, adolescents have friends, participate in extra-curricular activities, do good in school and earn high school diploma. However, others struggle with battling their own issues and demons making it rather challenging to finish school and earn that most coveted diploma to lock in their successful future.
The documentary "The Bad Kids" give much-needed light and hope to those students who are considered a lost case of the society. They are the ones who suffers domestic abuse, drug addiction, broken families and other atrocities. Because of their tender age, they resort to unlawful activities or just altogether give up on life because they can't seem to find the support and guidance they need.
According to Rotten Tomatoes, "The Bad Kids" revolves around the lives of particularly three different problematic students of Black Rock Continuation High School in the impoverished community of the Mojave Desert. Principal Vonda Viland's role is to enlighten students to continue with school and believe that they can achieve whatever they want as long as they have the support.
The three students featured in the documentary "The Bad Kids" have different issues too complicated to be handled by their volatile age. One is a teen father who can't support his own family, another one is young woman grappling with sexual abuse and the third is an angry young man from a broken home.
The documentary will showcase Viland's role in reforming the lives of these kids. It will provide viewers her method of teaching and inspiring which in turn yields to an impressive self-reformation.
As added by Movie Insider, "The Bad Kids" had its limited release on Dec. 16, 2016, in Los Angeles and Dec. 23, 2016, in New York. The documentary is directed by Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe. On its nationwide release, it should be a must-see documentary ideal for students who seem to be losing hope in forging ahead and is on the brink of giving up.