Willis Kent's main film production output was B-westerns. However, he also made a number of exploitation films, including
The Pace That Kills (1935),
Smashing the Vice Trust (1937),
Race Suicide (1938), and
Mad Youth (1940). Jeremy Geltzer suggests that like fellow exploitation filmmaker
Dwain Esper, Willis Kent was able to avoid censorship by not submitting his films for censorship classification. Advance publicity was avoided because exploitation films were quickly and cheaply made, and like Esper, Kent handled his own distribution and exhibition to independent cinemas. Film screenings would be therefore often be over before municipal authorities could react. Eric Schaefer notes two typical features of exploitation films, also found in
The Wages of Sin. To expand the film to a marketable length, exploitation filmmakers like Kent used "padding," often setting the main characters in a nightclub, which became an excuse for a series of acts. Cut-aways at frequent intervals would show "the story characters sitting at a table rapturously enjoying themselves". In addition, Kent's films usually began with a "square-up", a statement at the beginning of the film justifying itself as a dramatic exposé of one of society's problems. Performers on exploitation films were not on ongoing contracts. Leading actress Constance Worth had lost her
RKO contract in 1937, and had been through a messy divorce from actor
George Brent. Married for ten days in May 1937, their divorce was not finalized until December 1937. Accounts of the drawn out divorce dominated US and Australian newspapers for months. ==Reception==