August 7, 1963
American International Pictures
Comedy, Musical
DVD
B-
Not bad start to the most famous teen-movie series since Andy Hardy, this is meant to be taken a bit less seriously than the Gidget movies, if not so absurd as the later BP movies would get. This one has Frankie talking to the audience, Annette (as auburn-haired Dolores) singing advice to herself, and a not fully worked out scheme of love and jealousy. Is Dolores really just after Professor Bob Cummings to make Frankie jealous, or is she genuinely attracted? Why does Frankie find it hard to tell Dee Dee (and no, I don't know why it's not Do Do with that spelling) he loves her but he can absent-mindedly say it to Ava (Eva Six)? Why don't we get any duets with Frankie & Dee Dee, other than the title tune? And who's the girl with the sexy eyes that has all that chemistry with Frankie in his "Don't Stop Now" number?
Meanwhile, Cummings and the witty Dorothy Malone play an appealing middle-aged couple. Morey Amsterdam is the sort-of-beatnik running the local hangout, here called Big Daddy's, after the mysterious figure who's revealed to be Vincent Price, there to plug his AIP horror movies. And of course there's Harvey Lembeck as a brainless Brando (a not so wild one), Eric Von Zipper. Other than Andy Romano, who plays sidekick J.D., his motorcycle gang of Ratz & Mice are, in alphabetical order, Jerry Brutsche, Bob Harvey, John Macchia, Alberta Nelson (blonde Mouse), and Linda Rogers (auburn-haired Mouse).
John Ashley plays Ken here. Jody McCrea, who plays Deadhead, is the son of actor Joel McCrea. (Confusingly, Meredith MacRae is the daughter of Gordon and Sheila MacRae. She's probably best known for the sitcom Petticoat Junction.) Valora Noland, who plays Rhonda here (although I'm sure Annette calls her Wanda at first) would in Muscle Beach Party become the first of several actresses to play "Animal" in the series. Candy Johnson is the fringe-wearing dancer Candy. Dick Dale (of the Del Tones) plays Dick, and even has his name called out at the beginning of the fight scene (see below), so he can play bongo accompaniment.
Some of the rest of the "Beach Party crowd" in this movie includes musicians Roger Christian and Gary Usher, as well as, in alphabetical order, Duane Ament, Pam Colbert, Mickey Dora, John Fain, Ed Garner, Ashlyn Martin, Laura and Luree Nicholson (yes, the daughters of AIP co-producer James H. Nicholson), Bobby Payne (who would go on to The Muppet Movie, as Robert Payne), Lorie Summers, and Delores Wells. My personal favorite is Mike Nader, not so much for this movie as his later appearances, especially in Beach Blanket Bingo. Here he's the tall, thin brunet in a gray sweater in the first Big Daddy's scene. Brunette yoga girl Sharon Garrett would be a go-go girl in Speedway.
William Asher would go on to direct the rest of the basic series of five. (I'll discuss the matter of what counts and doesn't, as we go along.) This first entry not only builds on what the Gidget movies brought to the table, but introduces what would soon be its own traditions, including the big silly fight at the end (this time with a seemingly endless supply of cream pies). Later entries would get more sci-fi/fantasy, while this one has a moment or two of surprising early '60s realism. (What kind of cigarette are Frankie and his besties Ken and Deadhead passing back and forth?) I didn't like the sort of rape joke-- Dee Dee is calling for help from Von Zipper, so Rhonda says, "It's just Dee Dee and that man"-- but otherwise the movie is pretty inoffensive.
"As for their sex life...." Nonexistent? Limited to horizontal necking? We'll never know for sure. |
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