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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).
Midnight Movie: Jack Messitt: Michael Schwartz, Michael Swan, Brea Grant: United States [91] Mirrors: Alexandre Aja: Kiefer Sutherland, Paula Patton, Amy Smart: United States [citation needed] Monster: Erik Estenberg: Sarah Lieving, Erin Evans, Jennifer Kim: United States [92] Monster from Bikini Beach: Darin Wood: Tess Thomas, Amber Kloss ...
The Beach Girls and the Monster (retitled Monster from the Surf for 1966 TV release) [1] is a horror and beach party film, released in 1965, directed by and starring Jon Hall. [2] It is notable for its surf music instrumental soundtrack, bad acting, and not-very-terrifying-monster.
He made a cameo in AIP's Bikini Beach (1964) and had a bigger role in that studio's The Comedy of Terrors (1964), directed by Jacques Tourneur, and travelled to England to make Die, Monster, Die! (1965) co-starring Nick Adams.
Here's how the cast compares to the real people and the true story behind the Menendez murders. See the ‘Monsters: Lyle and Erik Menendez’ cast compared to the real people they're playing Skip ...
Besides the usual bikini-clad cast, random singing, silly plot line, musical guests, and ridiculous chases and fight scenes, the continuity linking this to the other beach films is the Rat Pack motorcycle gang led by Eric Von Zipper (Harvey Lembeck), as well as the appearance of previous beach party alumni Tommy Kirk, Deborah Walley, Bobbi Shaw ...
Here's what to know about "Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story," including the release date, the cast and how you can watch it. More on the 'Monster' series: Jeffrey Dahmer series is gruesome.
A sequence in the 1996 film That Thing You Do! makes an overt reference to the Nooney Rickett 4's saxophone-heavy Beach Ball scene in Pajama Party, as well as to the beach party genre in general. The band in the film, The Wonders, mime a live performance of an instrumental song during the filming of a beach party film titled Weekend at Party Pier.