Frankie & Annette MGM Movie Legends Collection (Beach Blanket Bingo / How to Stuff a Wild Bikini / Beach Party / Bikini Beach / Fireball 500 / Thunder Alley / Muscle Beach Party / Ski Party) | 
enlarge | Actors: Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello Studio: American International Pictures (AIP) Category: DVD
List Price: $39.98 Buy New: $23.99 You Save: $15.99 (40%)
New (41) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $23.49
Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 6466
Format: Box Set, Color, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Number Of Discs: 4 Running Time: 755 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: MGMDM108129D UPC: 027616081292 EAN: 0027616081292 ASIN: B000PMFRXS
Theatrical Release Date: July 22, 1964 Release Date: July 10, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Includes beach blanket bingo how to stuff a wild bikini beach party bikini beach fireball 500 thunder alley muscle beach party ski party Studio: Tcfhe/mgm Release Date: 10/14/2008 Starring: Frankie Avalon Run time: 755 minutes
Amazon.com The sun will never set on Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, The recording star from Philadelphia and the former Mouseketeer give a master class in chemistry in five Beach Party films that make up the bulk of this swinging eight-film box set. Beach Party (1963) helped to usher in a new wave of teen exploitation films that were far more fun and frolicsome than the rock and roll and juvenile delinquent films that preceded it. Frankie rents a beach house for himself and Annette's Dolores. He is stunned to learn that she has gotten cold feet and allowed the whole gang to hang out there. So Frankie decides to "dig somebody else," and Delores takes up with Robert Cummings, an anthropologist studying the sex lives of teens. All ends happily, and chastely. Harvey Lembeck, whose credits include Billy Wilder's Stalag 17, introduced his recurring series role as bumbling biker Eric Von Zipper. Surf guitar god Dick Dale provides accompaniment. Vincent Price pops up as Big Daddy to say, "Bring me my pendulum, kiddies. I feel like swinging." Beach Blanket Bingo (1965) is the magnum Party opus as Frankie goes sky-diving, Bonehead (Jody McCrea) falls in love with a mermaid, Linda Evans sings, Paul Lynde is snide, Don Rickles insults, and Frankie and Annette sing their classic, "I Think, You Think." Bikini Beach (1964) takes a swipe at the upstart Beatles with Frankie in a dual role as British pop star Potato Bug. Muscle Beach Party (1964) was Stevie Wonder's first film, and Peter Lorre's last. How to Stuff a Wild Bikini (1965) marks the end of an era, with Frankie, off in the Naval Reserves, getting help from witch doctor Buster Keaton in keeping interloper Dwayne Hickman away from Annette. Annette's absence is keenly felt in Ski Party, but James Brown performs, "I Feel Good" and Lesley Gore sings her top-40 hit, "Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows." Frankie and Annette were reunited at the racetrack in Fireball 500 (1966), but Fabian is a third wheel as a rival for Annette. Thunder Alley (1967) (from Richard Rush, director of the cult classic, The Stunt Man), is another car-racing vehicle that pairs Annette and Fabian, but by now the thrill is gone. Frankie and Annette are as indelible a screen couple and as inseparable in the public's imagination as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers or Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy. What is the secret to their enduring appeal? The last line of Back to the Beach (1987), an unsung gem unfortunately not included in this set, sums it up. Frankie and Annette walk together along the beach for the last time. Frankie turns to the camera and asks, "Are we the corniest couple in the world, or what?" --Donald Liebenson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
I love bikini"s! November 11, 2008 ASAYO DVORAK (Holden La.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I Love these movies! They are silly, filled with young pretty girls in bikini's, a weak story line and God I'm old! They make me smile and full of clean fun.
Frankie and Annette September 21, 2008 Barb Langlois This product was great. There were four dvds with two movies on each dvd. Each movie was excellent. They all played great with no flaws in any of them. Thank you for the great movies.
nostalgic fun September 9, 2008 J. Litten (virginia) go back in time and enjoy life at the beach as it never was. these movies are just fun.
Love the beach movies! September 2, 2008 W & M B I love all of the beach movies! They are basically dumb entertainment but really fun, dumb entertainment! I also enjoyed the Ski Party movie. I really didn't enjoy Fireball 500 and Thunder Alley. They took the innocence away from Frankie and Annette and made them hardened sinning characters. I prefer more of an innocent act like with the beach movies. Pretty good pack of movies but no special features. I would be just fine if the pack left out the two car movies.
These films are not as much fun as I remember them August 15, 2008 Brian Camp (Bronx, NY) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This box set contains eight movies produced by American International Pictures (AIP) from 1963-67, five of them "Beach Party" movies--four of them starring Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello (BEACH PARTY, MUSCLE BEACH PARTY, BIKINI BEACH, BEACH BLANKET BINGO) and one starring Annette, with Frankie in an extended cameo (HOW TO STUFF A WILD BIKINI). There's a Beach Party offshoot in SKI PARTY, starring Frankie, but with Annette in a cameo, and two southern-set stock car racing dramas, one starring Frankie and Annette (FIREBALL 500) and one starring Annette, but no Frankie (THUNDER ALLEY). Frankie's fellow South Philly teen idol, Fabian, co-stars in both of the racing movies. Given this lineup, I'm more than a little annoyed that two of the better Beach Party spin-offs, PAJAMA PARTY (1964), which starred Annette but no Frankie, and SERGEANT DEADHEAD (1965), which starred Frankie but no Annette, were not included here. They would have been a better fit than the two racing movies. BEACH PARTY, the oldest film here, is the only one of the eight that truly holds up well. It's got the strongest plot, some interesting adult characters in an anthropologist and his pretty assistant, played by Hollywood veterans Robert Cummings and Dorothy Malone, and the best music and song score of any of these films. The other Beach Party films don't age well at all. The comedy isn't terribly funny anymore and the songs are generally awful. The only pleasures come from some of the guest stars, particularly silent comedy great Buster Keaton, who appears here in BEACH BLANKET BINGO and HOW TO STUFF A WILD BIKINI. Don Rickles is in three of the films, but he's only allowed to be funny in BEACH BLANKET BINGO, in a scene where he does his classic insult routine. There are random musical guest stars who pop up out of nowhere, do a quick song, and disappear again, including Stevie Wonder, James Brown, Lesley Gore, and the Kingsmen. There are also surprise closing cameos in the first three Beach films provided by horror stars then appearing in AIP's Edgar Allan Poe cycle. And I must give a special shout-out to gorgeous Irene Tsu, who plays Frankie's native girlfriend during his stint with the Naval Reserve in the South Pacific in HOW TO STUFF A WILD BIKINI and has a bigger part than he does. The racing films need to be judged a little differently. The weaker of the two, FIREBALL 500, with Frankie, Annette, Fabian, and Harvey Lembeck, is set in deep south moonshine country and not one of these actors belongs there. THUNDER ALLEY, on the other hand, is actually kind of interesting and is easily the most watchable film in the set after BEACH PARTY. Directed by Richard Rush, it has a good feel for its stock car/stunt driving milieu, is a bit edgier than the other seven films, and throws in a love triangle involving Fabian, Annette, and sexy Diane McBain. Both of these films would actually have been better served as Elvis Presley vehicles and would have been better than Elvis' own films of the era. THUNDER ALLEY, in fact, features two of the cast, McBain and Warren Berlinger, from SPINOUT (1966), Elvis' own car racing film of the year before. Put Elvis in the Fabian role and give him a few songs, and put in Deborah Walley, also from SPINOUT (and Frankie's girl in SKI PARTY), who would have been more suitable in the Annette role, and we would have had a perfect Elvis movie. (I can't help but wonder, though, what an Elvis-and-Annette pairing would have been like.)
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