Where the Boys Are

When girls want a vacation filled with fun, sand, and romance, they go to Fort Lauderdale...

4.3
19841h 34m

Four college co-eds travel to Fort Lauderdale for their Easter week of Spring Break, and become involved in a series of adventures and misadventures

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: A TV Trailer For "Where The Boys Are '84"

A TV Trailer For "Where The Boys Are '84"

Cast

Photo of Lisa Hartman

Lisa Hartman

Jennie Cooper

Photo of Lorna Luft

Lorna Luft

Carole Singer

Photo of Wendy Schaal

Wendy Schaal

Sandra Roxbury

Photo of Lynn-Holly Johnson

Lynn-Holly Johnson

Laurie Jameson

Photo of Russell Todd

Russell Todd

Scott Nash

Photo of Daniel McDonald

Daniel McDonald

Camden Roxbury

Photo of Louise Sorel

Louise Sorel

Barbara Roxbury

Photo of Smutty Smiff

Smutty Smiff

The Rockats

Photo of Leigh Torlage

Leigh Torlage

Mr. Bullhorn’s Victim

Photo of Dan Fitzgerald

Dan Fitzgerald

Sgt. Porter

Photo of Mal Jones

Mal Jones

Guy in Jail #1

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

5/10

**_Fun, but shallow and prurient Spring Break frolics_**

Four college gals from Massachusetts drive to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for Spring Break where they experience varying results in their pursuit of the opposite sex.

“Where the Boys Are” (1984) is a quasi-remake of the cult classic from 24 years earlier, just way more debauched after the sexual revolution of the 60s. It’s not as distasteful as the future “American Pie” flicks, but it mixes a little too much crude sexual exploitation with fun-in-the-sun innocence, at least for my tastes.

Lynn-Holly Johnson and Lisa Hartman stand out on the feminine front but, to be expected (given the scenario), there are several notables on the periphery. On the masculine side of things, Russell Todd is effective as the wannabe rock star contrasted by the classical pianist rich kid played by Daniel McDonald. You might remember Russell from “Friday the 13th Part 2.”

A far better movie of this ilk is “Shag” (1989). Still, there are some positives, like Rick Derringer’s “Shake Me.”

The film runs 1 hour, 34 minutes, and was shot in the Fort Lauderdale area, including Boca Raton.

GRADE: C+

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