Back to the Beach

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Back to the Beach
Directed by Lyndall Hobbs
Produced by Frank Mancuso Jr.
Written by James Komach
Bill L. Norton
Starring Frankie Avalon
Annette Funicello
Lori Loughlin
Connie Stevens
Music by Steve Dorff
Cinematography Bruce Surtees
Editing by David Finter
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) Flag of United States August 7, 1987
Running time 92 mins.
Country United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Back to the Beach is a 1987 comedy film starring Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, directed by Lyndall Hobbs. The original music score is composed by Steve Dorff. The film generated a total domestic gross of $13,110,903.

Tagline: Fasten your seatbelts and get ready for a totally NEW WAVE motion picture experience.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello are husband and wife living far from the surf and sand in Ohio. Heading to California to visit their daughter Sandi (Lori Loughlin), Frankie and Annette are appalled to learn that she has been making time with surfer Michael (Tommy Hinkley). In time-honored fashion, our hero and heroine set about to make the beach safe for fun-lovers everywhere by driving out Michael's unsavory friends. Along the way, Frankie nearly ruins his marriage by dallying with Connie Stevens - one of several pop-culture icons appearing in the film, including Fishbone, Don Adams, Bob Denver, Alan Hale, Jr. Jerry Mathers, Tony Dow, Dick Dale, Stevie Ray Vaughan, O.J. Simpson, and Pee-wee Herman.

  • Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello served as co-executive producers.
  • Kirk R. Thatcher's punk song "I Hate You" was borrowed from fellow Paramount production Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986).[citation needed]
  • Throughout the movie, Frankie Avalon's character is only referred to as "The Big Kahuna", and never once is called by his first name. He is listed as "Annette's Husband" in the end credits. The name "Frankie" could not be used anywhere in the film, because Avalon played "Frankie" in the 1960s American International Beach Party films and legal issues were involved since this film was made by a different studio (Paramount Pictures). "The Big Kahuna," however, was not a character from the Beach Party series, but from the Gidget beach movies of the same period.
  • After filming was completed, Annette Funicello was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. During filming, as a result of fatigue from long hours shooting the film, she had noticed an increase in the frequency and severity of minor MS symptoms that she had experienced off-and-on for several years, and requested that her husband tell no one on the set.
  • In one scene, Annette puts two new jars of Skippy peanut butter into a cabinet already filled with Skippy. At the time, Funicello was the brand's real-life spokesperson.


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