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  1. Music. The score for The Beach Girls and the Monster was arranged and conducted by Chuck Sagle, and a few of the musicians assembled for the soundtrack were members of the surf band The Hustlers (who are known for their songs "Kopout," "Inertia" and "Wailin' Out") from Riverside, California. [5]

  2. There's a Monster in the Surf. Written by Walker Edmiston and Elaine DuPont. Performed by Elaine DuPont and Kingsley the Lion.

  3. The score for The Beach Girls and the Monster was arranged and conducted by Chuck Sagle, and a few of the musicians assembled for the soundtrack were members of the surf band The Hustlers (who are known for their songs "Kopout," "Inertia" and "Wailin' Out") from Riverside, California. [5]

  4. The score for The Beach Girls and the Monster was arranged and conducted by Chuck Sagle, and a few of the musicians assembled for the soundtrack were members of the surf band The Hustlers (who are known for their songs "Kopout," "Inertia" and "Wailin' Out") from Riverside, California.

    • Plot
    • Production
    • Music
    • Critical Reception
    • Legacy

    Young Richard Lindsay (Arnold Lessing) has given up his career in science in favor of his newfound passion, surfing on the Santa Monica, California beachfront. The beachfront is located near his father and stepmother's house, where he lives. This is to the great displeasure of his father, the noted oceanographer Dr. Otto Lindsay (Jon Hall), who is ...

    The surfing footage used for the scene where Richard runs a film for Mark was shot by one of the most prolific surf filmmakers of the 1960s, Dale Davis, who produced Walk on the Wet Side, Strictly Hot, and the landmark The Golden Breed. For some release prints, the footage was printed in color. According to the trailer for the film, the dancing gir...

    The score for The Beach Girls and the Monster was arranged and conducted by Chuck Sagle, and a few of the musicians assembled for the soundtrack were members of the surf band The Hustlers (who are known for their songs "Kopout," "Inertia" and "Wailin’ Out") from Riverside, California. In the book, Pop Surf Culture, written by Brian Chidester and Do...

    Writing in AllMovie, reviewer Cavett Binion described the film as a "hysterically awful rubber-suit monster romp" with "a certain ugly charm, according it "so-bad-it's-good" status." A review in DVDTalk reported that "Hall's direction is uninspired, most of the acting is limp, and the dialogue is laughable," that "Frank Sinatra Jr. is credited with...

    The film was featured in an episode of Deadly Cinema. The film is listed in Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson's book The Official Razzie Movie Guideas one of "The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made." It was also featured in an episode of The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat in which Felix is trapped inside a VCR and has to survive vario...

  5. The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965) - The theme song, "Dance Baby Dance," was written by Frank Sinatra Jr. and Joan Gardner (s "Joan Janis") and produced by Ed Janis. Arnold Lessing, who plays Richard, wrote the song he sings in the film, "More Than Wanting You."

  6. The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965) - The score was arranged and conducted by Chuck Sagle, and a few of the musicians assembled for the soundtrack were members of the surf band The Hustlers (who are known for their songs "Kopout," "Inertia" and "Wailin' Out") from Riverside, CA.

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