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IMDbPro

The Beach Girls and the Monster

  • 1965
  • Unrated
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
3.4/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965)
Surfers are being brutally murdered. Is the culprit a sea monster or just one of the teens' jealous parents?
Play trailer1:00
1 Video
70 Photos
B-HorrorHorror

Surfers are being brutally murdered. Is the culprit a sea monster or just one of the teens' jealous parents?Surfers are being brutally murdered. Is the culprit a sea monster or just one of the teens' jealous parents?Surfers are being brutally murdered. Is the culprit a sea monster or just one of the teens' jealous parents?

  • Director
    • Jon Hall
  • Writers
    • Joan Gardner
    • Robert Silliphant
    • Don Marquis
  • Stars
    • Jon Hall
    • Sue Casey
    • Walker Edmiston
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.4/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jon Hall
    • Writers
      • Joan Gardner
      • Robert Silliphant
      • Don Marquis
    • Stars
      • Jon Hall
      • Sue Casey
      • Walker Edmiston
    • 49User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:00
    Trailer

    Photos70

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    Top cast13

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    Jon Hall
    Jon Hall
    • Dr. Otto Lindsay
    Sue Casey
    • Vicky Lindsay
    Walker Edmiston
    Walker Edmiston
    • Mark
    Elaine DuPont
    Elaine DuPont
    • Jane
    Arnold Lessing
    • Richard Lindsay
    Read Morgan
    Read Morgan
    • Sheriff Michaels
    Carolyn Williamson
    • Sue
    Gloria Neil
    • Bunny
    Kal Roberts
    • Brad
    • (as Tony Roberts)
    Clyde Adler
    • Deputy Scott
    Dale Davis
    • Tom
    Kingsley the Lion
    • Kingsley the Lion
    Margo Lynn Sweet
    • Beach Girl Dancer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jon Hall
    • Writers
      • Joan Gardner
      • Robert Silliphant
      • Don Marquis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    3.41.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Poor Camp

    Beach Girls and the Monster, The (1965)

    * (out of 4)

    A bunch of teens just wanna dance to some good music and surf but a sea monster shows up to ruin their day. This is a rather infamous film that tries to mix with horror genre with any of the Beach Party movies but the film is a flat out disaster but I must admit that it kept me entertained throughout its 65-minute running time. If you can't stand bad movies then there's no need for you to see this one but if you believe that some bad movies can be entertaining then this here is a must see. The performances are all incredibly bad but this does lead to some nice laughs as does the really bad direction. The monster has a cute rubber face and I admit that I enjoyed the few scenes that it's in but the twist in the plot can easily be spotted. The film is best remembered today for its Frank Sinatra, Jr. soundtrack and it's actually pretty good even though it's third-rate Beach Boys stuff.
    Sargebri

    Makes Horror of Party Beach Look Like a Classic

    I remember watching this movie as a kid and I thought it was pretty scary, so when I saw it on DVD I decided to get it and now I see why a lot of people think this movie is a stinker. The film is part beach party flick, part whodunnit, part melodrama and part horror. John Hall, who showed a lot of promise with his role in The Hurricane, really showed how far his career had fallen when he became involved in this throwaway and Sue Casey showed why she was nothing more than a minor league actress. The other actors, if you can call them that, are so bad that you wonder why this film was ever made. However, I do like looking at bad movies and this is definitely one of them.
    3El Bacho

    You know that a movie has got a problem...

    ... when you see a boom mike in the trailer!

    "The Beach Girls and the Monster" features a clear shot of Sue Casey speaking on the phone during the trailer. With a boom mike above her. And the perch.

    The movie itself has a delightful scraping the barrel approach when it comes to exploitation. You can find the two main sub-genres from the 60's b-movies melting: the monster movie and the beach movie. Both aspects are indeed badly done. The monster is everything but frightening and one has to wonder why any of his victims hadn't the idea to kick him between the legs. And the beach part is so cliché ridden it looks like a "Lord Loves A Duck" sequence, except for the fact that "Lord Loves A Duck" was a parody (also featuring boom mikes on screen). There's for instance, for comic relief, a ventriloquist and his lion Kingsley who duets with the girls on a corny song. Actually, he could be the worst ventriloquist on Earth: he carries a false beard to hide his moving lips.

    Then, you find all the features of cheap exploitation movies. Washed-out actors playing the parts of supposedly attractive characters. "Teenagers" that were last seen in high school 15 before the shooting. Big names on the credits, like Frank Sinatra. Even if you must add "Jr" as that's his son, Frank Jr, and he merely wrote the score (mostly lounge jazz and a few Beach Boys attempts). Actually, Mark (Walter Edmiston) looks a little like Sinatra as the sculptor that Sue Casey teases. (By the way, his sculptures are not exactly flattering even for a fading beauty like Ms Casey.)

    Jon Hall, for his only directing credit, shot the thing cheaply and quickly. His house was a convenient place for inner shots and he tends to use zooming extensively to end a scene without making another shot. It's irritating even when it's Luchino Visconti who's directing and Jon Hall is apparently no Visconti.

    And there's the story, or indeed the lack of story. You also know that a movie has got a problem when Robert Silliphant is credited for "additional dialogue". Silliphant took a writing hand in both "The Creeping Terror" and "The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies!!?". In other words, he's responsible for two of the lamest screenplays of all times! "The Beach Girls and the Monster" is his third and final screen credit. So I have to wonder how much Silliphant improved the original screenplay.

    On the plus side, the girls on the beach (actually the dancing troupe from the Whisky-A-Go- Go club) have tight bikinis and giggles as if they were Shakira's mother. Or grandmother. So, every movie has a redeeming quality.
    5JohnSeal

    Bizarre and enjoyable

    I've only ever seen this film with the title Monster From the Surf, but whichever way you package it, it's a stone cold psychotronic classic. Heck, the dual presence of Radley Metzger behind the camera (he acquits himself nicely, especially with his shots of a drunken Vicky) and Frank Sinatra Jr.'s score should be enough enticement for anyone. Add in faded matinee idol Jon Hall in the starring role, season with liberal amounts of surf footage, and you have a winner! Especially memorable is the 'theme song', as interpreted by a hand puppet. A pleasure to watch on many levels.
    2michaelRokeefe

    Is it terror from the surf or a beach house?

    Pretty cheesy. John Hall directs and stars in this movie also known as MONSTER FROM THE SURF. Pretty girls are slashed to death by a sea monster. Right! I have always liked Jon Hall, but this movie is as interesting as sea weed. Stock footage of surfing and no "real" monster at all. Acting is about as lame as the script. Also in the cast are Sue Casey, Elaine DuPont and Walker Edmiston.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to the trailer for the film, the dancing girls seen in the movie are "The Watusi Dancing Girls" from Hollywood's Whisky a Go Go club on Sunset Boulevard.
    • Goofs
      Not only is the MG not the car that goes off the cliff (some 40's jalopy?) but the burning wreckage is yet another car, with the footage taken from some other movie.
    • Quotes

      Vicky Lindsay: Is that any way to talk to your stepmother?

      Richard Lindsay: Stepmother. You're not fit to be anyone's mother.

    • Crazy credits
      During the opening credits for the theatrical release as THE BEACH GIRLS AND THE MONSTER, we hear a vocal version of "Dance Baby, Dance", and see mostly the beach girls dancing along with one quick shot of the monster. During the opening credits for the American International Television release as MONSTER FROM THE SURF, we hear an instrumental version of "Dance, Baby, Dance", and see only surfing footage. Other than the title, the credits themselves are otherwise identical.
    • Connections
      Edited into FrightMare Theater: Beachgirls and the Monster (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Dance Baby Dance
      Written by Frank Sinatra Jr. and Joan Gardner

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 1965 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Les bikinis et le monstre
    • Production companies
      • American Academy Productions
      • Edward Janis
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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