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31 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Satire, Sex, The Cold War...And Rock & Roll!
This movie is an excellent time-capsule for the end of the late '50's/early'60's rock n' roll era. (It came out in 1963, just a few months before the Beatles hit our shores & changed everything forever.)

It's got everything:

An Elvis-like rock n' roll sex-machine on a motorcycle, check!

Cold War political satire, check!

A spoof of middle-class American values,...

Published on June 20, 2002 by Michael A. Quebec

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Hello Again, Birdie
More than 40 years after first viewing in theatres,this is still a delightful escape with a trip down memory lane. Music and lyrics are classics. Ann-Margret and Janet Leigh display dancing and singing talent that is often forgotten, with excellent support work from Dick Van Dyke, Paul Lynde, Bobby Rydell and Maureen Stapleton. The times certainly changed after this...
Published on May 7, 2007 by Bert Brand


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31 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Satire, Sex, The Cold War...And Rock & Roll!, June 20, 2002
By 
Michael A. Quebec (Union City, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This movie is an excellent time-capsule for the end of the late '50's/early'60's rock n' roll era. (It came out in 1963, just a few months before the Beatles hit our shores & changed everything forever.)

It's got everything:

An Elvis-like rock n' roll sex-machine on a motorcycle, check!

Cold War political satire, check!

A spoof of middle-class American values, check!

Young, gorgeous Ann-Marget, check & check again!

I was born too late to experience this time period & I haven't actually seen the Broadway original from 1960 with Chita Rivera in the Janet Leigh role. But this movie is a fast-paced, witty musical-comedy. I know the 1995 version sticks closer to the original story, but I think that version plays too much into the whole "nostalgia"-thing....an element that was NOT a part of any show actually made back then. That version was also slow & not very funny.

This version is great! A lot has been said about the music, but the comedy hasn't got much attention. The humor manages to be suggestive without being vulgar. It's kind of like reading an old issue of MAD Magazine, but this is acted out!

If you want laughs every second, great songs & great dancing, as well as a humorous glimpse as to what American attitudes were like back then, then this 1963 version is for you!

It's "Honestly Sincere!"

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34 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVE This Musical!!!, August 20, 2005
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This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
I actually played "Kim" in my middle schools rendition of Bye Bye birdie, and since then, this has been my absolute favorite musical of all time - I'm sure this is partly due to my great memories of being in this play, but regardless of that, the songs are great and I love the story line.

Bye Bye Birdie is about an Elvis-type guy who has just got word that he's being drafted into the army. Because of his popularity as a singer, they decide to run a contest where 1 lucky girl will be chosen to have "one last kiss" with him. Kim wins the contest, and will be given her kiss live on the Ed Sulliven Show (a show that was really popular in the 1950's).

Much of the story surrounds the excitement about Kim winning the contest & the fact that her father and boyfriend don't want the kiss to happen. Will they be able to stop it?

Then there's "Albert" played by Dick Van Dyke - an on & off again songwriter, and his girlfriend "Rosie" who wants nothing more than for Albert to propose to her. Unfortunately, Albert is such a "mommas boy" that he can't seem to make any decisions for himself, and his mother is not about to suggest that he get married and leave her all alone! Will he ever step up and pop the question?

Overall, I would highly recommend this movie to anyone who enjoys musicals. It will remind you of a much simpler time - with the music and outfits in classic 1950's style. A great movie for "family night"!
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24 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I love Ann Margret.I love One last kiss &One boy., August 7, 2006
By 
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
I am japanese and can understand English a little.But I can enjoyed this movie very much.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How could you not like this movie!?!, December 29, 2003
By 
Lou "L.S" (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
"Bye Bye Birdie" is a classic and refreshing fun movie for all ages. I am only a 14 year old male, but I have amazing respect and love for this movie. Most of you knocking the movie are probally teens also, and probally have just seen the movie recently. I was in LOVE with this movie when i was about 5 years old all the way untill now! The movie was my absolute favorite when I was very young, I can't remember how was introduced to the movie, but I was crazy over it, and my parent's bought me the laserdisk, and just this Christmas they got me the DVD! The movie is such a fabolous fun movie. I remember how much I loved the intro to this movie, with Ann-Margret singing the amazing title track "Bye Bye Birdie". I was always amazed with her Intro and Outro of this movie. I understand the movie is different from the play, and I know thats why most of you don't like the movie. I am also very big into drama and theather, but I have yet to be in a production or seen a production of "Bye Bye Birdie". A local High School around here is doing "Bye Bye Birdie" this spring, which I will love to see. My High school is putting on "The King And I" this spring, which is going to be fabolous, I will be in it. But back to "Bye Bye Birdie"....I feel this movie is just so refreshing, when I am in a bad mood, this movie can definetly make me feel better, the songs are fun and happy, the acting is also great. Ann-Margret's performance was just absolutely outstanding, and Dick Van Dyke, Janet Leigh, and Maureen Stapleton were also fabolous. If I ever have a chance to be in a production of "Bye Bye Birdie", my dream role would be Albert, Dick Van Dyke's part, I would love to play that part.

So, I just wanted to say, I am sick of seeing so many people knock this wonderful movie, and I know some of you are probally around my age, and just recently saw it. Like I said before, I have so much respect for this movie, because I've loved it since i was so young, And I know some of you might be shocked, because I am so young, and was not even alive in 1963, and I love this movie so much.

The DVD is great, and has some great features, So I suggest you check it out!

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21 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ann-Margret never so gorgeous again, August 17, 2004
By 
Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
George Sidney was a great MGM director who, in the 1960s, had the great fortune of stumbling across a new star, Ann-Margret, and managed to make her an international star right at the beginning of the "Youth Era" that dominated Hollywood in the 1960s. Of all the young stars, maybe Ann-Margret had the most winning combination of vitality and innocence. Her lush figure and dancers' sway, and that wild mane of red hair, made her almost too hot for the movie screen, but George Sidney knew hot to focus her charms so that she became not a threat to the viewing public, but an actress of enormous appeal. He made three films with her, this one, VIVA LAS VEGAS and the later, lesser, THE SWINGER, notable for its scenes in which a group of young hipsters swing Ann-Margret through a mass of body paint to make her into a living paintbrush.

In BYE BYE BIRDIE her dancing with an ensemble to the upbeat number A LOT OF LIVING TO DO is the highlight of the film. It is one of those rare screen sequences in which every shot, every beat is perfect. George Sidney had earlier made some great showcases for Kim Novak, but his treatment of Ann-Margret shows why he is the most gallant of all Hollywood directors. Okay, so he didn't do so good by Janet Leigh, who looks awful in her black wig and can't impersonate a Puerto Rican songwriter any more than I can. She's ludicrous and almost ruins the movie.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Looking better with each passing year..., August 19, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
Those of us who love movie musicals have a very tough fact to admit to ourselves: the movie musical is as dead as Elvis, and just as unresurrectable. Therefore, when looking back to those periods of Hollywood history when musicals were made in great abundance, from the 1930s through the 1970s, we begin to see that a lot of those films really were good, and look better all the time. Many of them are so specifically of their period that they become camp, some actually have a longer shelf life than on first glance, and others are just too much for any period, period. George Sidney's 1963 adaptation of the Broadway success BYE BYE BIRDIE falls into the middle category. Jam-packed with talent, colorful, breezy, and fast-moving, it's a really snappy piece of musical entertainment.

Yes, it most definitely alters the Broadway material, but the play isn't a sacred cow the way MY FAIR LADY is, for example. The screen adaptation of BIRDIE streamlines the plot, switches the order of the songs, and adds a completely different denouement, all in the cause of quickening the pace, and putting one of its stars, Ann-Margret, front and center. This film is the defining record of when she became a true movie star. Lending their considerable talents on screen are Dick Van Dyke, Janet Leigh, Bobby Rydell, Maureen Stapleton, and Paul Lynde (plus Ed Sullivan!). The picture fairly zips along, propelled by the sparkling score, and Onna White's kicky dances.

The DVD is sharp, clear, and punched up with Dolby Digital sound. This is only fitting in that BIRDIE was the first musical ever to be enlarged from 35mm anamorphic Panavision to 70mm stereo for its initial (non-roadshow) engagements. This fun musical looks better and better all the time.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Even my kids love it!, May 5, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
I originally bought this movie because our school was going to put on the musical production of "Bye Bye Birdie".
As it turns out the play and the movie are quite different but each ever so enjoyable in their own way. We saw the movie first than the play and it all tied together so well whereas if you have just seen the play it seems to leave questions unanswered and doesn't seem to be "complete".
My family absolutely loves the movie! This movie is honestly my 5 year old little girl's favorite and she knows all of the words to the songs. On the other hand my mother thought it was a blah movie with lame acting--which I did as well when I first saw it.
I think that what changed my mind and why I now truly enjoy the movie now is the songs. There are songs in this movie I have heard all my life such as "Put on a Happy Face" but had no idea where they originated and they do compliment the movie perfectly. I do enjoy the acting of Ann Margaret, Dick Van Dyke, Janet Leigh and the rest of the actors as there are some true greats in this movie which make it worth watching just on that merit alone.
The entire movie is filled with humor, great songs, and well it is just plain wholesome fun! I love the movies from the 50's and 60's and "Bye Bye Birdie" is the epitome of what the era was reminiscent of.
It's definately worth seeing-maybe you'll love it or maybe you'll hate it but you'll never know if you don't try!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Frothy Musical Fun from a Simpler America, December 3, 1997
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (VHS Tape)
Bye Bye Birdie is a delicious slice of musical Americana from a seemingly far less complicated era - the early 1960's. Based on a hit Broadway musical, the story concerns the national upheaval occasioned by the drafting into the army of an Elvis-Presley type rock and roll star, Conrad Birdie. The film is a good-natured parody of rock and roll, publicity gimmicks, live television, the generation gap, and the teenage culture of the 1950's. This is the movie that made Ann Margret a star, and it does so quite brilliantly. The stage show was completely rewritten to showcase her in the comely role of Kim McAfee, the lucky Ohio teenager who gets to bestow a symbolic farewell kiss on Conrad Birdie as he departs for the service. Paul Lynde, (later familiar to TV audiences from his long, humorous reign in the Center Square on The Hollywood Squares) repeats his Broadway role as Kim's exasperated father and gets to immortalize his lament in the hilarious song "Kids"! Dick Van Dyke also reprises his Broadway role, charmingly paired with the versatile, often underrated, Janet Leigh. The film is colorful and cinematically innovative, the tuneful score well delivered by an able cast including teenie bopper idol Bobby Rydell. All in all, fun for the whole family, and viewed today, an enjoyable "period piece". (Incidentally, Conrad Birdie, for all his resemblance to Elvis Presley, seems to have been more closely modeled on the one-time rock and roller Conway Twitty, who later became a popular Country star). They don't make 'em like this anymore! No-strings cinematic fun! END
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Whats with the cover on this DVD?, October 4, 2007
By 
Rocco "Best In Manhattan!" (New York City, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
Why do they make a DVD with cover art that does not even appear in the film? Also Ann Margrets final shot in the end is cut off! This was a great musical of the 60's with great performances and songs and the current packaging makes it look like a B film! cOLUMBIA PICTURES, get it together!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Greatest Movie Musical Ever Made?, April 29, 2011
This review is from: Bye Bye Birdie (DVD)
I'm gasping for air. I was born a year after the movie was released, and only viewed it for the 1st time in 2011. I am an old fart at this point in time, but ... I've got a lot of living to do! Anne Margaret just burns the screen into a mess of melted plastic, like the cartoons dripping off the screen in the Put On a Happy Face sequence. Kitsch or period humor? Paul Lynde is a comic genius, and Dick Van Dyke has charisma, innocent charm and dancing chops that really deserve more recognition. What he does so effortlessly CANNOT be easy. By oh, Anne Margaret. The extended dance sequence in I Got Lot of Living to Do? I'm still shaking.
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Bye Bye Birdie [VHS]
Bye Bye Birdie [VHS] by George Sidney (VHS Tape - 1996)
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