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- Though the story is simplistic and the characters aren't anything more than the usual types, PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND is entertaining in its own way. The humor is innocuous enough, and the players deliver their roles with an earnest freshness. The on-location shooting helps the story, and the direction always manages to keep action on the screen.
www.tvguide.com/movies/palm-springs-weekend/review/2000045724/Palm Springs Weekend - Movie Reviews and Movie Ratings - TV Guide
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Love is the game for a group of college students letting loose in Palm Springs, Calif. For basketball player Jim Munroe (Troy Donahue), the attractive Bunny Dixon (Stefanie Powers) quickly...
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Best in the film is Jerry Van Dyke who supplies some needed comic relief and plays a mean banjo. Still the film really hasn't worn well over the decades. But it's pleasant enough entertainment. Troy Donahue gets to sing over the title credits. That was a mistake.
Palm Springs Weekend: Directed by Norman Taurog. With Troy Donahue, Connie Stevens, Ty Hardin, Stefanie Powers. College students on spring break in Palm Springs pursue romantic entanglements. Jim falls for Bunny, Biff for Amanda.
- (1.2K)
- Comedy, Drama
- Norman Taurog
- 1963-11-05
Jan 3, 2021 · Directed by Sergeant Dead Head’s Norman Taurog, Palm Springs Weekend packs itself with so many people and so many storylines, it fails to give accurate time to let any of them play out to a point we recognize as “plot.” And that’s okay, because it’s a helluva good time.
A group of college students from Los Angeles travel to Palm Springs to spend the Easter weekend there. Student Jim Munroe (Troy Donahue) falls for Bunny Dixon (Stefanie Powers), the daughter of the overprotective Palm Springs police chief (Andrew Duggan).
Set in Palm Springs during a long, fun-filled weekend where several Los Angeles college students flock to spring break, centering on Jim who finds romance with Bunny, the daughter of Palm Springs harred, stressful police chief.
Aug 5, 2019 · Predictable nonsensical ‘fun in the sun’ routine teen flick. In this Norman Taurog (“If I Had A Million”/”Bundle of Joy”/”G.I. Blues”) weakly directed pic the college crowd invades Palm Springs, California, for their annual spring break. It’s written by Earl Hamner Jr. without distinction.