(MGM,
1960) 93 minutes - available on DVD and VHS videocassette from Amazon.com
Director -- Henry Levin.Starring
-- Dolores Hart, George Hamilton, Yvette Mimieux, Jim Hutton, Barbara
Nichols, Paula Prentiss, Connie Francis, Frank Gorshin, Chill Wills.
Watch the movie trailer for Where the Boys Are below.
(Press the arrow button to play video)
Dolores
Hart joined a convent and became a Catholic nun only a couple of years
after making this sexy picture, so what else is there to say?Seriously, this little tragicomedy made film history, becoming
the biggest-grossing low-budget film in MGM's history to that time,
making all its young actors movie stars, giving Connie Francis her
biggest hit ever with Neil Sedaka's theme song, and finally becoming the
Granddaddy of all the lesser "beach pictures" to follow.
Story's
about four teenage girls on their first spring vacation from a wintery
Midwest college driving down to Ft. Lauderdale hoping to meetIvy League boys for some sun, suds, and fun.Most of the cast was "discovered" in this film and many
went on to successful acting careers, especially George Hamilton, Jim
Hutton and Paula Prentiss.The pace moves, the
comedy's funny, and one quickly sees why Where
The Boys Are
became more thana movie,
but a national phenomenon instead, the predecessor of every MTV spring
break special to follow.George
Wells' adept adaptation only covers the first half of Glendon's
famous novel, however.In
the second half of the book, the college kids help raise money to pay
for guns to smuggle out on a yacht for Fidel Castro to help him with his
Cuban revolution!
A
huge hit and one of the seminal films of the Sixties.
Reviews
"High
comedy, romance galore and a case of heartbreak are in this unique movie
made by Joe Pasternak for MGM. There is a wonderful cast of young players,
some experienced, some not, who under Pasternak's paternal supervision and
Henry Levin's knowing direction put vitality and reality into the
characters they portray . . . Dialogue is just right, natural and bright.Even though the movie is loaded with laughs, it has a serious
undertone and subtle advice to college girls on a lark."Wanda Hale, New York Herald Tribune
"Potential
box office whopper on basis of unusually strong appealfor young people.Showcase
for several of Hollywood's more
promising younger players . . . Producer Joe Pasternak deserves a thank-you for giving all this young talent an
opportunity to show off.He'll
be all the better forit when the
returns are in.This one has
smash potential."Variety
"As
for the new faces, they are a very competent bunch, and the best is also
the newest of the lot: that of tall, young Paula Prentiss, who is making
her professional debut but can already toss off a funny line with as
little strain as Roslind Russell before she discovered costumes.Summing Up: Two cheers for the team."Newsweek
". . . a
travel-poster panorama of fresh young faces, firm young bodies and good old Florida sunshine. Time
"The
quintessential teen vacation film, Where
The Boys Arehelped make Easter in Fort Lauderdale de rigueur for
thousands of college students . . . This film has spawned countless imitations
over the years, including a recent remake, but this is the granddaddy of
them all."Z Cable TV Guide
Where
the Boys
Are '84
(Tri-Star,
1984) 93 minutes, available on VHS videocassette from Amazon.com
Director -- Hy Averback.Starring
--Lisa Hartman, Lorna
Luft, Lynn-Holly Johnson, Russell Todd, Alana Stewart.
This
box office bomb was an embarrassment to all involved, with producer Allan
Carr almost turning it into the first gay beach picture, what with all the
male bun shots in skimpy bathing suits.Bad reviews killed this bad movie right out of the chute, and the Swarthouts
had absolutely nothingto do
with it, nor did any of the original film's stars, luckily.Remake rights were purchased by Carr from the original producer,
Joe Pasternak, and Glendon
only received a modest payment and token credit for writing the original
novel, buried in the end credits.He
didn't mind much, considering the way this disaster turned out.
Reviews
"Where
the Boys Are
'84
(rated R for considerable raunchiness) is yet another in the never-ending
series of misbegotten remakes."Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times
"Tame update . . . Where
the Boys Are '84
is a film with modest expectations and even on those terms it's a bit
disappointing . . . Picturestill
doesn't totally deliver on its promise of a good time.Maybe a more authentic sounding rock soundtrack would have helped.The girls, too,seem a
bit old for the college life.Or
maybe nostalgia just isn't what itused to be."Variety