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Friday, July 12, 2019

Where the Boys Are (1960) [NR] ****


A film review by Michael Reuben for blu-ray.com on July 27, 2017.

Where the Boys Are appeared in 1960, the same year as the setting for the 2007 opening season of TV's Mad Men, and both are time capsules of the manners and mores of a bygone era. The difference is that Mad Men reinvented that time with an often ironic awareness of what would follow it, whereas Where the Boys Are represents its age without detachment. Adapted from a popular novel by Glendon Swarthout (who also wrote The Shootist), the film was billed as a teen comedy, one of the first, and it helped spawn an entire sub-genre of beach-themed entertainments, including the Beach Party series starring Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello.

But Where the Boys Are had something more serious on its mind, which is why it plays today as an uneasy mixture of broad farce and romantic melodrama. In an era when the Hays Code still strait-jacketed filmmakers from dealing honestly with sexual relations, Where the Boys Are used humor and euphemism to bypass screen taboos. If much of the film's creative circumlocution seems quaint today, it's largely because Where the Boys Are anatomizes a template of morality that, within just a few years, would be shredded by the sexual revolution of the Sixties. It's worth noting that the film's year of release was also the first year that birth control pills became widely available, thereby transforming the female sexual calculus on which the Where the Boys Are plot largely depends.

The Warner Archive Collection has remastered Where the Boys Are for Blu-ray with a new transfer that showcases director Henry Levin's (Journey to the Center of the Earth) widescreen compositions and location photography. With its (now) politically incorrect depictions of good girls vs. bad, the film is a fascinating museum piece, enlivened by lead performances that include the screen debuts of singer Connie Francis and newcomer Paula Prentiss, who would go on to become a familiar figure in both film and TV, equally famous for her talents as a comedienne and her durable marriage to actor/director (and sometime co-star) Richard Benjamin.

Where the Boys Are traces the adventures of four freshman women who depart their snowy campus up north for spring break on the Florida beaches of Ft. Lauderdale, because that's where the boys are. Over the course of a frenetic week, the foursome experience adventures that are sometimes comic, sometimes romantic and sometimes traumatic. Meanwhile, the population of their cut-rate motel room expands every night, as they continue to take in penniless students and strays.

The film establishes its relationship issues in an early classroom scene where Merritt Andrews (Dolores Hart) offers an impromptu class presentation on premarital sex - or, in the carefully chosen word of the Where the Boys Are script, emotional involvement and playing house. Merritt scandalizes her teacher, whose ironic name is Dr. Raunch (Amy Douglass), and thrills the entire class by acknowledging what all of them already know, which is that girls are now expected to indulge their boyfriends' desires and those who withhold their favors quickly become unpopular. Still, when Merritt and her friends reach Florida, she struggles to remain a good girl, and the story rewards her with the catch of the season in the person of Ryder Smith (George Hamilton), a Princeton legacy and heir who sweeps Merritt off her feet, but not into bed, with his good looks and charm - not to mention his yacht, mansion and butler. Merritt's friend, Melanie Tolman (Yvette Mimieux), takes the opposite approach, throwing herself into the holiday spirit, drinking to the point of collapse and dating a revolving door of Ivy Leaguers (or so they say) with whom, we are meant to infer, she shares a different bed every night. Where Merritt is rewarded for being good, Melanie is ultimately punished for being bad, and the film treats her punishment as unfortunate but deserved. (If you can't take date rape in stride, Where the Boys Are isn't the film for you.)

The group's other two members endure more comfortingly comic romantic entanglements. Angie (Connie Francis) finds herself attached to an eccentric musician named Basil (Frank Gorshin), whose band plays dialectic jazz and who doesn't begin to notice the diminutive co-ed until she opens her mouth to sing and the voice of Connie Francis emerges. (Producer Joe Pasternak actively recruited the singer for the role, even though she was more interested in continuing her successful recording and touring career.) The exceptionally tall Tuggle Carpenter (Paula Prentiss) is paired with an even taller admirer whose name is equally unlikely: TV Thompson (Jim Hutton), so dubbed because he aspires to work in television, which may explain why he delivers every sentence as if he were speaking into a microphone. TV routinely bemoans his lack of success with women, but Tuggle sees in him a candidate to help her achieve her life's ambition, which is to become a married baby-making machine. (One wonders why she's bothering with college.) The budding relationship hits a snag when Tuggle refuses to sleep with TV - it's one of the film's most overt sexual negotiations - and the disappointed suitor finds his attention straying to a big-chested platinum blonde nightclub performer with the appropriately seductive name of Lola Fandango (Barbara Nichols, aka Queen of the B Movies).

Where the Boys Are maintains a light-hearted tone throughout most of its running time, effectively exemplified by Ft. Lauderdale's beleaguered police captain (Chill Wills), who warns his officers to expect anything and to maintain a sense of humor because you're gonna need it if you want to survive! Routine police broadcasts dispatching law enforcement to the latest scene of student excess provide a humorous narration, much like the loudspeaker announcements in M.A.S.H. TV's brief dalliance with the pneumatic Ms. Fandango results in a slapstick disaster that lands most of the group in police custody, from which Lola extricates them with a classic dumb blonde plea. But then, in its final twenty minutes, Where the Boys Are turns deadly serious - and it also reveals the prudish underpinnings of the sexual teases that have been propelling the film. As it turns out, talking about sex is a perfectly safe pursuit for an educated young woman in the world of Where the Boys Are, but actually doing it places her in mortal peril. Indeed, Where the Boys Are appears to endorse the view that bad girls who let men take liberties forfeit both their dignity and the right to say no. It's a jarring turn in a film that bills itself as a frothy romantic comedy, and the fact that no one in 1960 seems to have noticed the dissonance says as much about the era as the script's squeaky clean language and chaste onscreen kisses. When it's not busy clowning around, Where the Boys Are plays less like an entertainment and more like an artifact of an ancient civilization. It belongs in the Smithsonian. [Reuben’s rating: 6.7 out of 10]

Blogger’s comment: I totally agree with the reviewer. I view Where the Boys Are as a time capsule of the social and sexual mores, language, makeup, costumes and sets of 1959-60. There’s even a one-second glimpse of a late 1950s Mercedes-Benz 300SL Gullwing coupe at the 47 minute mark of the film. And it was a treat to see George Hamilton, Jim Hutton (father of actor Timothy Hutton), Paula Prentiss, Dolores Hart, and especially Yvette Mimieux, who’s almost exactly six months older than I am, whom I’ve also seen in The Time Machine (1960) and The Black Hole (1979) among other films, and whom I remember as my major celebrity crush of 1960-61 – sixty years ago.

Labels: college, comedy, drama, Fifties, romance, Sixties


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