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Saving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie is a 2024 American adventure comedy film based on the animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants, created by Stephen Hillenburg. It was directed by Liza Johnson and written by Tom Stern and Kaz , based on a story by Kaz.
How To Stuff A Wild Bikini, the soundtrack for the film, was released in 1965. Most of the songs are performed by various cast members, with two numbers by The Kingsmen . [ 18 ] The album was released in both mono (WDM 671) and stereo (WDS 671) versions, with the latter being very scarce.
The Swimsuit Issue at the Swedish Film Institute Database This article related to a Swedish film of the 2000s is a stub . You can help Wikipedia by expanding it .
Cast notes: Beach Blanket Bingo was Frankie Avalon's last starring role in the beach party films. He appears for only a few minutes in How to Stuff a Wild Bikini and not at all in The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini. Donna Michelle, who portrays Animal, was Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Year for 1964.
Aron Kincaid, who was forced to participate in the film under his long-term contract with AIP, was supposed to perform two musical numbers, but these scenes were dropped. After filming was completed, a number of the cast went to the Golden Oak Ranch to film the opening number, Bikini Party in a Haunted House, sung by Kincaid and Piccola Pupa. [23]
Bikini Beach is a 1964 American teen film directed by William Asher and starring Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello. The film belongs to the beach party genre of movies, popular in the 1960s. This is the third in the series of seven films produced by American International Pictures (AIP).
Although both Columbia Pictures's Gidget (1959) and Gidget Goes Hawaiian (1961) have been cited as precursors to the genre, in that Gidget "launched surfing into mainstream America," [14] [15] while its sequel merely repeated the effort, AIP had actually established an archetype for Beach Party with 1958's Hot Rod Gang and especially with its 1959 sequel Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow, both written ...
It was also the first movie Buster Keaton made for AIP. Louis M Heyward claims casting Keaton was his idea as they had worked together previously on The Faye Emerson Show. [8] and the first movie for Bobbi Shaw, playing her "ya, ya" Swedish bombshell and Keaton's partner. [14] It was the first film Tommy Kirk made for AIP. [15]