Billie

Billie

1965 "That crazy rock 'n' roll beat has taken over her feet!"
Billie
Billie

Billie

5.7 | 1h27m | en | Comedy

A 16-year-old tomboy and high school athlete becomes embroiled with the lives around her boyfriend whose conservative father is running for mayor.

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5.7 | 1h27m | en | Comedy , Music , Romance | More Info
Released: December. 13,1965 | Released Producted By: Chrislaw Productions , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

A 16-year-old tomboy and high school athlete becomes embroiled with the lives around her boyfriend whose conservative father is running for mayor.

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Cast

Patty Duke , Jim Backus , Jane Greer

Director

Don Weis

Producted By

Chrislaw Productions ,

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JohnHowardReid Copyright 1 September 1965 by Chrislaw-Patty Duke Productions. U.S. release: 1 September 1965. New York opening at the Astor, the Trans- Lux East and others: 15 September 1965. U.K. release: 13 December 1965. Australian release: 25 August 1966. 7,800 feet. 87 minutes. Censored to 85 minutes in Australia.SYNOPSIS: Billie Carol (Patty Duke), tomboyish teenager can do anything any boy on the athletic team of Harding High can do, only better. This embarrasses her father, Howard Carol (Jim Backus), who is running for mayor on a "male supremacy" ticket. Billie's boy friend is Mike (Warren Berlinger) who is also on the team but runs her a poor second. This gets him mad and he demands she quit so that he may shine. She refuses and they break up. At this point, a undignified photo of Billie and her father falls into the hands of Mayor Davis (Billy De Wolfe) whom Billie's father means to unseat, and he makes the most of it. A rumor gets around that Billie's older sister Jean (Susan Seaforth) is pregnant, and Davis makes the most of this, too.NOTES: "Time Out for Ginger" as presented by Shepard Traube opened on Broadway on the 26 November 1952 at the Lyceum, running a successful 248 performances. Nancy Malone, Polly Rowles, Philip Loeb and Conrad Janis starred.COMMENT: A big welcome back to Billy De Wolfe, making his first film for some time. His debates with Jim Backus are the highlight of the film. Other veterans present include Jane Greer, Charles Lane and Richard Deacon. Don Weis' direction is nondescript enough, but there are some amusing lines and, all in all, the film is an agreeable surprise.OTHER VIEWS: The association of Peter Lawford, Patty Duke and Don Weis in Chrislaw Production's "Billie", the gay, romantic Technicolor United Artists release, is a reunion of long time friends as well as a combination of top-flight Hollywood talent. Weis is producer- director of this, Miss Duke's first Hollywood starer, and Lawford is its executive producer. At Metro a few years ago, Weis directed two television pilots in which Lawford starred — "Dear Phoebe" and "The Thin Man" — and went on to direct additional episodes of each. With two Directors Guild Awards and an additional Guild award nomination to his credit, Weis' motion picture and television accomplishments lead one to believe that he hasn't had a day off since coming to Hollywood and such, indeed, is pretty nearly the case. After working as a script clerk and dialogue director for, among others Stanley Kramer, he went to M-G-M where he directed such films as "Bannerline", "A Slight Case of Larceny" and "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis". — U.A. Publicity.
utgard14 Silly bit of fluff about a teenage tomboy named Billie (Patty Duke) who can run super fast due to music in her head she calls "the beat." She can run faster than all the boys, which causes the expected problems. This is an old but fun gender equality story. It's sincere in what it's trying to do even though it's pretty dated in how it's trying to do it. Patty Duke is fun and looks cute in track shorts. 28 year-old Warren Berlinger is her friend (and potential boyfriend). He's a poor fit to play a high schooler. He even has a bald spot! Jim Backus plays the dad and Jane Greer is the mom. Backus' character is one of the more interesting in the film, seeing as how he is a politician running on a traditionalist conservative platform yet his personal views are somewhat in conflict with this. He's a hypocrite, in other words. Other familiar faces like Dick Sargent, Charles Lane, and Richard Deacon also appear. It's likable stuff but not for everybody. The scenes of Patty Duke running with that big grin on her face and the '60s music playing is pretty cheesy stuff. Patty sings some corny songs, as well. The subplot about the older sister is positively stupid. You're not going to enjoy this movie much unless you are able to not take it that seriously.
Lee Eisenberg This lighthearted comedy casts Patty Duke as a teenage girl who's really into athletics, much to the chagrin of her political office-bound father (Jim Backus). It's a little surprising that a pre-feminist movie was allowed to depict a girl who bests the boys at sports, but "Billie" does just that. The movie actually doesn't have much in the way of plain old comedy; it's more about how the daughter's ambition - coupled with the news about the older daughter (Susan Seaforth) - forces the family to reconsider their place in society. It's a fun romp, but nothing particularly special. Nonetheless, I really liked those scenes of Patty Duke dancing.As for the cast, one could describe it thusly: Helen Keller meets Thurston Howell meets the second Darrin (Dick Sargent) meets Mel Cooley (Richard Deacon) meets one of the primary character actors (Charles Lane). I don't know if Jane Greer had a most famous role.
moonspinner55 Scrappy theatrical comedy filmed on a television budget, with Patty Duke putting the high school jocks to shame with her athletic abilities (seems sneaky Pat has been running track to a secret "beat" in her head!). Nothing memorable, but worth-watching for the always-good Jim Backus as Patty's politician father--who can't seem to decide where he stands on women's issues--and Patty herself is also very lively. Her short platinum 'do is a bit odd (and occasionally looks like a wig or a blonde mop-head), but she seems happier here than on her self-named TV series and does very well with her two song numbers (her voice is shaky and without focus, but extremely bright and appealing). **1/2 from ****