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Bikini Beach

  • 1964
  • Approved
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello in Bikini Beach (1964)
A millionaire sets out to prove his theory that his pet chimpanzee is as intelligent as the teenagers who hang out on the local beach, where he is intending to build a retirement home.
Play trailer2:34
1 Video
31 Photos
SlapstickComedyMusicRomance

A millionaire newspaper publisher is fed up by the scantily clad teenagers who hang out on the local beach. Meanwhile, the teens go against an uppity young Englishman who challenges them to ... Read allA millionaire newspaper publisher is fed up by the scantily clad teenagers who hang out on the local beach. Meanwhile, the teens go against an uppity young Englishman who challenges them to a drag race.A millionaire newspaper publisher is fed up by the scantily clad teenagers who hang out on the local beach. Meanwhile, the teens go against an uppity young Englishman who challenges them to a drag race.

  • Director
    • William Asher
  • Writers
    • William Asher
    • Leo Townsend
    • Robert Dillon
  • Stars
    • Frankie Avalon
    • Annette Funicello
    • Martha Hyer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Asher
    • Writers
      • William Asher
      • Leo Townsend
      • Robert Dillon
    • Stars
      • Frankie Avalon
      • Annette Funicello
      • Martha Hyer
    • 42User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:34
    Official Trailer

    Photos31

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    Top cast57

    Edit
    Frankie Avalon
    Frankie Avalon
    • Frankie…
    Annette Funicello
    Annette Funicello
    • Dee Dee
    Martha Hyer
    Martha Hyer
    • Vivien Clements
    Don Rickles
    Don Rickles
    • Big Drag
    Harvey Lembeck
    Harvey Lembeck
    • Eric Von Zipper
    John Ashley
    John Ashley
    • Johnny
    Jody McCrea
    Jody McCrea
    • Deadhead
    Candy Johnson
    Candy Johnson
    • Candy
    Danielle Aubry
    • Lady Bug
    Meredith MacRae
    Meredith MacRae
    • Animal
    Delores Wells
    Delores Wells
    • Sniffles
    • (as Dolores Wells)
    Paul Smith
    Paul Smith
    • Cop #1
    James Westerfield
    James Westerfield
    • Cop #2
    Donna Loren
    Donna Loren
    • Donna
    Stevie Wonder
    Stevie Wonder
    • Little Stevie Wonder
    • (as Little Stevie Wonder)
    The Pyramids
    • The Pyramids
    The Exciters Band
    • The Exciters Band
    Janos Prohaska
    Janos Prohaska
    • Clyde
    • Director
      • William Asher
    • Writers
      • William Asher
      • Leo Townsend
      • Robert Dillon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    5.41.8K
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    Featured reviews

    Sargebri

    The Best of the Beach

    This is probably the best of the "Beach Party" films. The series pretty much hit its peak here and after this it was all downhill. Annette Funicello is her level headed best and Frankie Avalon is still her lunkheaded boyfriend who only can think about surfing. The thing I think is a little ironic about this film is the fact that Avalon in his portrayal of Potato Bug takes a swipe at The Beatles. Many forget that Avalon was one of the hottest singers in America until the "Fab Four" arrived the same year this film was released. After that it was downhill from there. The other shining moment in this film has to belong to Harvey Lembeck as the perpetually dimwitted leader Eric Von Zipper. This was his defining role and this film was his funniest yet.
    5wes-connors

    Beatle Over a Potato Bug

    It's a colorful southern California summer of 1964.

    Frankie Avalon (as Frankie) hears nature calling him to Annette Funicello (as Dee Dee); but, she hears only wedding bells. In short order, the "Beach Party" gang goes ga-ga over popular English superstar Frankie Avalon (in a dual role, as "The Potato Bug"), arriving to fill out a romantic triangle for Mr. Avalon and Ms. Funicello. Newspaperman Keenan Wynn (as Harvey Huntington Honeywagon III) is also on hand; accompanied by his ape "Clyde" (Janos Prohaska); Mr. Wynn sets out to prove the "sexually preoccupied" teenagers are akin to monkeys. Adult beauty Martha Hyer (as Vivian Clements) thinks Avalon and company are just having a good time. Don Rickles (as Big Drag) and Harvey Lembeck (as Eric Von Zipper) help add drag racing and motorcycle fun.

    Returning more to the initial entry's "Beach Party" formula makes "Bikini Beach" an improvement over the series' recent dip into "Muscle Beach Party". The script is relatively snappy, and amusing. "Clyde" and "Frieda" have a great scene together; for example, when "Clyde" plays with Rickles' bird, in the dragster's beer joint (strictly for kids, Rickles explains, as he serves only beer and soda). Avalon's dual role is nicely played; and it is a timely, welcome nod to the mid-sixties musical "British invasion". Funicello, with a decent amount of navel displayed, is always charming; however, the added hair was unnecessary. The regular "teenagers" are attractive, and Ms. Hyer performs exceptionally well.

    Director William Asher uses bewitching wife Elizabeth Montgomery well; she reads the beginning of a newspaper article, and voices the French "Lady Bug". Despite the presence of Stevie Wonder, the Pyramids, and the Exciters; performing songs by the usual writers, the soundtrack is derivative, and unmemorable. Look for Gary Usher, Roger Christian, and Mike Nader among the "Beach Boys". Mr. Nader once told me he was in these movies, and now I see him.

    ****** Bikini Beach (7/22/64) William Asher ~ Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello, Martha Hyer, Don Rickles
    6Bunuel1976

    BIKINI BEACH (William Asher, 1964) **1/2

    This sequel to MUSCLE BEACH PARTY (1964) is only slightly better: much of the teen cast returns, as well as Don Rickles (but, having now forsaken muscle-men for drag-strip racing) and even Stevie Wonder. We do get a number of new faces – eminent publisher Keenan Wynn (with a practiced simian in tow, he's intent on demonstrating that the youth of today have regressed to pretty much its primitive state!) and schoolteacher Martha Hyer constituting more or less the normal people (they start out as opponents but gradually come to understand and love one another), Harvey Lembeck as the overage leader of a motorcycle gang called Eric Von Zipper (actually, this character had already featured in BEACH PARTY [1963]: here, he's prone to falling victim, by his own hand, of Peter Lorre's paralysis-by-touch technique seen at the end of the previous film) and Timothy Carey (appearing very briefly as a pool-playing eccentric who has a werewolf, fitted with a leather jacket, for a sidekick!).

    There's even a second role for Frankie Avalon – doubling as a legendary mop-top and gap-toothed (essentially a cross between The Beatles and Terry-Thomas!) British singer/racer…and, then, there's that great final gag involving Boris Karloff (seen a couple of times from behind throughout but only revealed at the very end as an art dealer interested in Rickles' abstract collection, quipping that he ought to tell his pal Vincent Price – noted for his taste in fine art and at the time also contracted to AIP – about it!). It's these quasi-surreal elements – including the monkey driving Wynn's car (to the recurring consternation of two traffic cops) as well as a dragster, and even doing a bit of surf…but extending to the final credits as blonde-with-powerful-hips Candy Johnson is joined in her wild dance by an aged member of Wynn's old folks' home! – which render the film that much more enjoyable than its predecessor. Otherwise, we get a lot of the same shtick as before – though the beach scenes themselves are thankfully downplayed here; the climax, then, involves a Keystone Kops-type chase which culminates in yet another gratuitous bit of brawling slapstick (this time occurring at Rickles' pseudo-beatnik joint).

    Again, the songs are far from classics but, all in all, the film retains some interest (not least in the contribution of cinematographer Floyd Crosby, production designer Daniel Haller and composer Les Baxter – all of them synonymous with Roger Corman's contemporaneous horror films based on the writings of Edgar Allan Poe!) in particular for characterizing the transition between two trends in youth-oriented pictures i.e. the Juvenile Delinquent films of the 1950s and the Counter-Culture efforts (advocating drug use and Free Love) that would prevail soon after
    dbitgood

    They should have let Don write his own lines

    More surfer wackiness from Frankie, Annette and the gang, with semi-regular Don Rickles and guest star Keenan Wynn showing up. Charming in its' way, it was cornball then and remains cornball now, though some of its' references fly over the heads of the youngsters who take the time to watch this today. Someone wrote this would be mediocre if released today. I beg to differ. This is a masterpiece compared to much of the dreck that is produced today.
    6Bob-45

    Finally! Annette is Smart, Sexy and Slightly Dangerous.

    We red-blooded males who followed Annette Funicello's career from the time she was a nubile Mousketeer will be especially enamored of "Bikini Beach," a superior entry in the, admittedly, mediocre "Beach Party" series. For once, Annette gets to play smart, sexy and slightly dangerous, possessing more than a passing interest in sex. Gone, thank goodness, is her usual "Doris Day with mild PMS" persona. I have a strong suspicion this is closer to the "real" Annette, here. I certainly hope so. Even Annette's singing is very good. I wish AIP would've sprung for the bucks to give "Bikini" better choreography. Annette, a trained dancer would have impressed even more. Annette's swimsuit is even more revealing than usual, about as close to a bikini as "Papa Disney" would allow her to wear.

    While the script, as usual, plays as if it were cribbed from the back of a cereal box, the gentle ribbing of British rock stars, modern art and drag racing are a welcome change from the usual "Beach Party" dross. Martha Hyer is along and provides some classy, mature-sexy glamor. "Bikini" even has a cameo by a very young Stevie Wonder. While Frankie Avalon won't win any acting awards, his alter-ego, "Potato Bug" is certainly a less annoying character than Mike Meyers' execrable "Austin Powers". Even Don Rickles is along, playing a character named "Big Drag," a gentle pun on Don "Big Daddy" Garlits, a well-known drag racer and auto customizer of the era. Too bad, Rickles doesn't get to cut lose with his usual wise guy humor. Guess AIP was too cheap to spring for that.

    While no work of art, "Bikini Beach" is more than just watchable. It's actually, at times, enjoyable. I give "Bikini Beach" a weak "6".

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The 4 engine dragster was owned by Tommy Ivo. The car was named the Showboat. It was powered by four 401-cubic-inch Hilborn-injected Nailhead Buick engines. The dragster weighed 3555 lbs. The four engines combined to make about 1700 horsepower. Revell made a 1/25 model of the car.
    • Goofs
      Shadow of boom mic can be seen on Potato Bug's tent as Dee Dee is talking with him.
    • Quotes

      Harvey Huntington Honeywagon III: Sir, I consider you a member of the lower classes.

      Eric Von Zipper: Hey, that's right. How'd you know that I dropped out of school at the third grade?

    • Crazy credits
      The final credit, "An American International Release", is written on a bikini bottom.
    • Connections
      Featured in A Century of Cinema (1994)
    • Soundtracks
      Bikini Beach
      by Guy Hemric and Jerry Styner

      Performed by the cast (uncredited)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 22, 1964 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La fiesta de los bikinis
    • Filming locations
      • Auto Club Raceway at Pomona - 2780 Fairplex Drive, Pomona, California, USA(Drag racing scenes)
    • Production company
      • Alta Vista Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $600,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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