Starring Noreen Corcoran, Linda Marshall, Ahana Capri, and Steve Rogers
Directed by William Witney
Music and Lyrics by various
We're going on Spring Break this week with our weekday reviews. Paramount jumped onto the Beach Party bandwagon with their first of two teen musicals released in 1965. This is the one that came out first, and the one that owes more to Beatlemania and cartoon gags than the beach. Although the Beatles were wildly popular, they were hardly the only band around in the mid-60's. The Beach Boys had been pumping out surf-rock hits since 1962. Given they were the preeminent surf-rock band of the time, it was probably inevitable that they'd turn up in one of these movies. How well do they and two of their biggest hits work in this tale of a sorority who desperately try to earn the money to save their frat house? Let's begin with the title song over views of, well, girls on the beach and find out...
The Story: The ladies of Alpha Beta are all ready for fun in the sun on their spring break when they learn that they owe the bank $10,000 for their sorority house. They think they have the money, but their kindly house mother gave it to every person in need she ever came across. Desperate to keep their house and their housemother out of trouble, sorority president Selma (Corcoran) comes up with a variety of different schemes to earn money in a week, from entering a cake recipe contest to their prettiest member Patricia (Lori Saunders) joining a beauty pageant.
Their biggest idea is turning their after-Easter dance into a concert and inviting big-name talent. Three boys who are smitten with Selma and her friends claim they know the Beatles and can get them to appear. The girls are thrilled, but the boys have no intention of doing anything but running out...until they see what a big deal everyone makes of the Beatles being in their show. The girls, however, are the ones who end up having to cover when it turns out that the boys might have fibbed slightly.
The Song and Dance: The girls on the beach may not spend much time on the beach, but I do like how the focus is on them. Their schemes and ideas to earn money are what drives the film, and they're all pretty funny, from the constantly-changing cake to what they convince Patricia to do for the talent portion of the pageant (and how she ends up making use of it later). Of the Beach Party imitations, only Get Yourself a College Girl puts as much emphasis on its female characters. I also like that it's more about their relationships and the one with their sorority than with the guys. Some great music too, including two big hits from the Beach Boys, the title song and "Little Honda."
The Numbers: We open with the Beach Boys performing the title ballad over the credits (though it doesn't really work with the girls running around on the sand), and then for college students at a local hangout. The Crickets give us a weirdly re-written "La Bamba" as our first chorus number and we meet the Alpha Beta members. Alpha Beta member Lesley Gore performs "Let Me Alone" to an attentive young man at the first sorority party. I don't know why the boys came down on one of the Beach Boys' prettiest ballads, "Lonely Sea," which they perform at an outdoor party at night.
"Little Honda" provides the backdrop for another dance routine as the college kids finish the party at their hangout, right before the boys claim they know the Beatles. Patricia may be embarrassed about her "Dance of the Seven Veils," but the judges sure like it...and so do the concert-goers near the end of the movie. The girls really get into Gore's "It's Gotta Be You" at the sorority house, right before the three guys come down dressed as women. Gore does even better with "I Don't Want to Be a Loser" at the concert. The girls regret having told the Sigma Fi freshman pledges to get a lock of the Beatles' hair as an initiation when they imitated the Beatles and perform "We Want to Marry a Beatle." They later pacify the crowd by reprising it as themselves.
What I Don't Like: First of all, the boys were not only jerks for lying and almost letting the girls hold the bag, they were interchangeable. I don't know how the girls could tell them apart. None of them were remotely interesting. Sometimes, the girls could be pretty interchangeable, too. Any girl who didn't take part in a side plot, like the cake contest or the beauty pageant, were almost as dull. And I have to agree with a reviewer who pointed out how ridiculous it is for everyone to be fussing over the Beatles when they have two other major acts of the era, the Beach Boys and Lesley Gore, right there. (In fact, this would ironically be the Beach Boys' only appearance in a Beach Party movie.)
The Big Finale: Harmless hour and a half worth of fun for nostalgic Baby Boomers and classic rock fans.
Home Media: One of the more obscure Beach Party imitations, this can currently only be found on YouTube.