Q: So were having a psycho beach party and we need some music, i know the classics like Dick Dale and Beach Boys but I'm looking for some music to play that has the surfer elements and maybe a little harder than the beach boys. anyone know of any bands that
A: Jan & Dean
Surf Punks
The Surfaris
The Sunrays
Frankie Avalon & Annette Funicello
Throw in some Buddy Holly, Four Seasons, and Ritchie Valens too
And throw in "All Day And All the
Moonlight Serenade (2006)
Pumpkin (2002)
Pennies (2002)
Stephen Tobolowsky's Birthday Party
The Chromium Hook (2000)
The Peter Principle (2000)
Psycho Beach Party (2000)
The Slaughter Rule (2002)
, As Florence Forrest. A social outcast along with her friend Berdine, Florence is in those itchy years of puberty – she's starting to fall for boys, but is still stuck in the all thumbs innocence of youth. It also doesn't help that she's also got a tough, wonder-woman-Donna-Reed mom named Ruth (Beth Broderick). Florence's innocence is soon to change, however, because dead people keep popping up, and boy-crazy Marvel Ann (pre-Oscar nomination Amy Adams) needs a drive to the beach so that she can hit on a cute surfer named Starcat ( Buffy's Nicholas Brendon).
Florence ends up joining Starcat's surfing circle, which includes two obviously gay, yet totally delusional surfers, a guy with one testicle and another who suffers from psoriasis. They dub her "Chicklet," and she learns to surf under the tutelage of Kanaka (Thomas Gibson). Unfortunately, a wrench is put in her upward mobility – she has split personalities. Any time she gets worked up, circular objects about to spin in her eyes and she snaps into her vary ego -- Ann Bowman, a saucy, deep-voiced sexual dynamo. (On the odd occasion, she also turns into Tyleen, a sassy treacherous girl.) As Ann, she growls over those who put Florence down, but she mainly bides her time in an off-screen kinkfest with Kanaka, who in one scene proudly displays "Ann Bowman Rules" carved into his interrupt cheek.
...
“Halloween: Part 2” is not the most original title on the hinder, but it did act as a sort of soft finale for the introductory arc to the series. We know the players, we have a pretty good idea of who’s dead and who’s quick and I think it’s safe to say that there is going to be something very, very wrong with Vivien Harmon’s ( Connie Britton ) coddle. Moving on. Part 2 opened up more or less where Part 1 ended. Larry Harvey ( Denis O’Hare ), the burned-face shovel-wielder is pounding on the Harmon’s door and demanding money from Ben ( Dylan McDermott ). Since only Violet ( Taissa Farmiga ) is home (aside from all the creepers that live in the basement), we get a real sense of dread right off the bat. That sense is validated as S&M man (or The Gimp) creeps on Violet from behind. Then, surprise! He disappears.
Strangers With Candy
Robot Chicken
Psycho-Beach Party
SuperStar
Kuffs
9 Dead Gay Guys
Mr. Mom
Safe Men
Superior of Dead
Sixteen Candles
South Park
The Jerk
Tootsie
Hey guys im gettin ready for a out of school summer party with some college buds of mine, our coureses end next week and were tryin to get together a "psycho beach party" like theme so i was gunna look for some horror summer movies kind of like
|
Not Psycho Enough: 'Psycho Beach Party' at Morgan-Wixon Theatre
Emily Kottler, Caitlin Jemison, A. Leslie Kies, Tim Herzog, and Taylor D'Andrea in 'Psycho Beach Party' (photo by Saul Saladow). Charles Busch's 1960s beach movie parody play, Psycho Beach Party, is playing at Morgan-Wixon Theatre in Santa Monica.
|
|
NEWS: Lab Theater announces summer shows, complete fall season "Psycho Beach Party" and "Five Kinds of Silence" are the "summer" season and will run on Fridays and Saturdays ONLY in July and August. Counting the summer productions, this is a 10-show schedule - plus the December playwriting project. |
|
Santa Monica Preps for 'Psycho Beach Party' This Saturday
A farcical marriage of 1950s psychodramas, 1960s beach movies and 1970s slasher films, cult classic "Psycho Beach Party" returns to the stage Saturday at the Morgan-Wixson Theatre in Santa Monica. Penned by Charles Busch, the play is set in 1962 Malibu
|