A pair of 60's hippies fall in love with the girl next door, who is exactly the kind of square that they are fighting against.A pair of 60's hippies fall in love with the girl next door, who is exactly the kind of square that they are fighting against.A pair of 60's hippies fall in love with the girl next door, who is exactly the kind of square that they are fighting against.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Elizabeth Allen
- Landlady
- (as Betty Ellen)
Art Lewis
- Mr. Karlson
- (as Artie Lewis)
Alan Paige
- Neighbor
- (uncredited)
Betty Palivoda
- Checker in Market
- (uncredited)
Victor Paul
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
Charlie Picerni
- Policeman
- (uncredited)
Sally Yarnell
- Neighbor
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was made and released about five years after its source play of the same name by Neil Simon was first performed in 1966. The original Broadway production of "Star Spangled Girl" opened at the Plymouth Theater on 21st December 1966 and ran for 261 performances until 5th August 1967. It starred Connie Stevens, Anthony Perkins and Richard Benjamin. The theater marquee for the production can be seen during the opening titles of TV series That Girl (1966). The play's setting is described in its intro as being "A duplex studio apartment in San Francisco".
- Quotes
Norman Cornell: I'm sorry for what happened...
Amy Cooper: That's alright.
Norman Cornell: Andy... she spoke nicely to me...
- ConnectionsReferences King Kong (1933)
- SoundtracksGirl
Written by Charles Fox & Norman Gimbel
Performed by Davy Jones
recording supervised by Jackie Mills
Featured review
Annoying and cartoonish
I watched the first 20-25 minutes and had to shut it off. Sandy Duncan is too cute as Amy, but Todd Susman's character, Norman, is the prototype for the desperate virgin later seen in "Porky's" and satirized in "Not Another Teen Movie". He has as much depth and subtlety as a Tex Avery cartoon. Tony Roberts is merely a younger version of Oscar Madison with the same quips and delivery. In truth, he and Susman are toned down versions of Martin and Lewis, with Roberts as the smooth sexpot and Susman as the insufferable loony. If there was a spark of originality in this film, it went out around 1979.
helpful•11
- hitchcockkelly
- Jan 25, 2023
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content