This is the first movie I ever saw at a movie theater. I loved the movie, and this is my favorite scene. My mother, two sisters and I sat threw it 4 times! I'm 63, and still love it.
I remember that my Sister entered the contest to be One of the Extras in the film. some magazine was picking One Girl from Each State that the Bus Traveled thru . . .She made it to the Finals, but looked too much like Susan St. James . . .
Interesting! When was this filmed (summer/fall of '67(?). - did you wear your own clothes or they picked them out for you - was 12 at the time only vaguely aware of the "mod" look though listened to the Association, the Turtles, and even some Aretha.
She was such a good actress in the more obscure roles she portrayed including The Ballad of Cable Hogue and The Poseidon Adventure, as well as working with Elvis Presley, for example. I didn't know she had passed, thank you for sharing.
This song has been stuck in my head for 55 years. Was raised by nuns, so Mom tuned into this every time it aired. It wasn't long after this the church started having folk masses, where we played soft rock songs, instead of those boring hymns. I learned guitar and got in the group. We'd jokingly call Sunday service a "gig". lol Those were such better days. I still dance like this. lol
This is exactly what it was like. I still remember seeing fishnet stockings and white go-go boots when I was in 1st grade. This era didn't last long - maybe 1964ish to about 1970.
The mod look here was replaced by the hippie look of the early 70s which compared to mod was actually kind of drab - I remember the girls’ brown suede shoulder bags with fringe - in fact aside from denim everything seemed to be brown. For guys the brown belt with the peace symbol buckle. Then color returned and we got into the polyester 70s - questionable taste but there was a right way to do it and a wrong way.
Yeah, those big baby doll dresses like the one that Susan Saint James was wearing, those were made popular by Twiggy. Me too regarding this dance sequence, it is the most memorable for me as well. I was a little kid who wanted to be mod like the big kids and this dance clip was really groovy!
Também assisti este filme ainda criança. Talvez eu tivesse 8 anos, não lembro ao certo,mas lembro que o filme era bastante divertido, já a música naquele tempo não gostava;hoje em dia gosto. E alguém observou que o rapaz altão dança feito um louco e fica o tempo todo desprezando a Mary Clarence?
Rosalind Russell had the best lines of anyone in this movie and she delivered them with her customary great timing. My mother took me to see this when I was ten. I was the only one who got to go because the other siblings were misbehaving. My mom and I loved it and later I bought the video and played it many times. Of course, we liked The Trouble With Angels even more with Miss Russell and the incomparable Hayley Mills. Having a Catholic upbringing, my family and I could really relate to these movies.
rextrek, I'm glad you enjoyed this fun and uplifting comedy with the great Rosalind Russell and the vibrant Stella Stevens! They don't make movies like these anymore so it's a good thing we have videos and DVDs to go back to them as many times as possible.
This movie was released at the end of 1968 in Japan. I wrote to Susan Saint James. Several months later, I received her portrait with her own autograph !! Now I'm 70, I still like her.
Me neither. Others may have it worse, but I've always had a hard time. The nuns convinced me that being happy was wrong or seflish. Take care of your body and your mind and drink water and move your body. Just walk someplace beautiful if you can. Or walk while thinking of things that can make you smile. Whatever is wrong in the world is easier to deal with when you try to be as well as possible. I don't know anything about you, so i hope that didn't sound inconsiderate or ignorant. I just care, and am sharing what helps me be functional. If this is what makes you smile, just get more of it. Maybe i'll send you some clips that are fun like this. The more minutes you spend getting those little hormonal lifts, the more your brain seeks and finds it randomly. This is how the brain works, and i am just getting good at it after taking care of my mom. Mom had Alzheimer's and was dying of cancer. I found what made her happy, sought it out on youtube, and created playlists for her. She spent half the day giggling at cute animals and babies and stuff. Eventually her suicidal emotions got replaced, and she succombed to the cancer without going to those dark places again. She had a peaceful passing with me holding her hand. What i learned is that creating a positive emotional climate is how you overcome darkness. Life and death are what we fill them with, i guess you could say.
Ah...Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. The would later join ranks with Monkees Davy Jones and Mickey Dolenz to form Dolenz, Jones, Boyce and Hart and record and tour. I saw them at Disneyland in Anaheim decades ago. Peter Tork joined them as a guest. It was fantastic.
Years ago, I ran into Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones (they played earlier in the evening) after hours at Magic Mountain with a friend who was an employee. Talk about silly. We could barely see each other, but had such a fun, and intimate chat. The old days so simple and carefree.
Susan St James was the girl in the yellow dress! I love this movie because I grew up in a catholic background and spent 12 years in catholic school! So true to my life except for the dancing part! It never happened at my school! Rosalind Russel and Stella Stevens were excellent together. Great chemistry!!!!
I absolutely love this song. It takes me back to the first time I heard it back in 1978 in Las Vegas. I don’t remember the name of the casino but they had a place for us underage kids to go and play games and watch movies while the grown ups gambled. They were showing this movie and I fell in love with it, Where Angels Go Trouble Follows. And I still rewatch it every time it comes on. Good times, thanks for the memories.❤
Teenagers and Nuns what a winning combination. I love this scene from this fabulous movie. Susan Saint James looks adorable. They don't make movies like this anymore.
gotta love the dancing, and the "flood ready" trousers! the dancing looks like a million times more fun then any kind of dancing you see nowadays...holy fuck! when did I get old!?
True about the "floods" - even on the cover of Abbey Road which came out in '69 the Beatles' pants look too short - by 72-73 when I was in high school pants had to be long enough - of course when platform shoes came in they could be pretty long but you wouldn't walk on them. They were flared by that time with big wide cuffs.
I had a foster sister in the late 60s, I was about 5 and she was 15. She always dressed cute, and my parents let her use a record player in her room, and I would sit with her, listening to her 45's and picking me up to dance. She took me to my first shopping mall! Lol.. unfortunately, after several months with us, she had to go back to her home. I came back from kindergarten one day and when I got home, I noticed she was gone, my parents told me and my older brother she had to go home. I cried so much, my dad held me. Luckily, months later, we got to see her. She had family living next door to my aunt and uncle! My hometown use to be smaller, so it's like everyone knew each other or somehow related. My hometown has grown considerably since the 60s, but it still has that close knit feeling... sometimes too close when you don't want to run into someone you know. 😳
I was one of the extras in the movie. The girls were mostly beauty contest winners and the boys were all kids from Germantown academy where they filmed in Ft Washington, pa
My high school sweetheart, Martel Day, was the drummer in this scene. We lived near Philly, and he was in several bands that were connected to DJ in Philadelphia. The members this band were from our high school, Brandywine High School, in Wilmington, Delaware.
Catholic sponsored fun time memories. I still remember the carnivals dances at church the rides lights and happy families..rich or poor catholic's let you have good let your hair down good time even lighting cherry bombs..these are Memorable delights...peace too all..luv you all. Play it again!!
LOVE this movie ....Hayley Mills is my favorite! This song was the attraction to this movie, then I was curious about the movie in the 70's....Agreed to previous comment, simply MAGIC!
I like to think if Hayley Mills had appeared in this movie her character would've been like younger hipper nun Sister George. I wouldn't be shocked if they actually were developing Sister George with Hayley Mills' character Mary from The Trouble with Angels in mind but getting Hayley for the sequel didn't work out so they retooled the character to become someone completely new for a different actress (Stella Stevens).
Okay , what the heck !!! Why isn't this fantastic, psychedelic version by this adorable group of mod boys and the whole awesome soundtrack by "Lalo Shifrin" remastered onto cd ???? The Boyce and Hart version lacks the raw 'garage band' purity of this one , it really rocks ! I love when the break comes and all kids are kinda "mosh jumpin" together , still effective ! This is one of my all time favs from my childhood , part of the "Vatican II" years, I was right there as the nuns habits got shorter and they were actually allowed to start being people ! For all those who kick this movie to the curb , my previous Catholic training suggests I don't tell you "where" to go ! Groovy and sweet and yes , SOOOOO MUCH COOLER and better than the first ! It wasn't that far off the mark , in second grade I had this lovely new nun dressed in "full penguin", but by third grade she returned as a lay person , decked out in a suede mini skirt and boots !!! Yes, the times they were a' changing. Still , our hearts remained intact. I understood the struggle.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw RIGHT !!!.......with all the crap out there released over the years, I still would love to get this soundtrack restored and remastered, complete with extras like this "awesome teenage garage band's input. Let's face it...... it's just "groovy man" !!! 🤣♥️☮️
@@FD-tu9rt Amen to that. This film deserves the deluxe treatment, both visually and aurally, with lots of extras: interviews, commentaries and the like.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw AWESOME !!!!.........Now , how do we get anyone to do it ?!!! Sadly , most of the people originally alive ( my generation ) have passed on and though it has a cult following it's too "feel good" for today's market , sadly. Let's hope 👍🙏☮️
I remember seeing this movie, back in 3rd grade in grade school in the school auditorium... Don't recall much of the movie, but I was always fond of this song. All these years later it takes me back to that day in grade school, so many years ago.
I loved this movie! It was good clean and funny. This song was cute and I enjoyed Stella Stevens and Rosalind Russell (hope I spelled it right)😊.in this tale of coming of age...
yes, hands down , its the throbbing guitar , and clarity , when I was 12 I wanted this version , but I could only see the movie so many times , but here we are .
I know , I've been trying to find out for years if these "boys" were real and actually recorded this version . That awesome , kinda sinister sound effect when they repeat "trouble follows" is so 60's and soooo cool ! It blows the "Boyce and Hart" version out the window. If anyone knows anything about this version from the dance scene , please post it. 👍
LOL. The girls shortened their skirts. We did the same thing back then and we weren't even in Parochial School. In the morning when we left the house to go to school, our hems were at our knees. When we got to school, we would roll our waistbands up so that our hems were about 6 inches above our knees! We did this every day. We also put eye makeup on in the school bathrooms, and washed it off before we went home. It was such an innocent time for us. ❤❤❤
This version is better then the Boyce and Hart version if nothing else because of the eerie but interesting high harmonizing part behind the lead singer, and the plucky base guitar. I was about 12/13 when this came out. My square-ish dad cringed in his seat during this tune at the walk in theater in 1968. Robert at 68.
That tall guys just blows off Marvelanne just to dance by himself. lol! I love this part of the movie. My mom said this is how they dressed back when she was that age.
@@dianesingerman9650 😂...It is a catchy tune..Id watch it every time it was on television as a kid.. and they play it in every scene..I still watch it..Stella Stevens just passed..😢
Lead singer is wearing 'Beatle boots', those things were already on the 'outs' and becoming outdated by '68, young folks were already into wearing 'desert boots', moccasins, and other shoes. That the J.C. Penney's 'Mod' look clothing and the big metal belt buckle catalog, that is a bit of a stretch, being popularized somewhat by The Monkees in about '66...Robert at 67.
The mini skirt was a big trend in 67/68. In July of 67 my dad drove the whole family to N Y for the day ( we were from Pa,) and on Broadway in the Wall Street area at lunchtime we saw a young woman with her skirt well above the knee - first time my Mom had seen that - and I remember the skirt was green. A whim of memory that never left. I think 1969 was when they were the shortest - the following year they tried to do longer skirts but it bombed. Was too soon. They caught on eventually but it took a few years.
What l understand now is this is Boyce and Hart (studio musicians), but the movie version of this song l actually like better than the 45 single radio version cuz it sounds trippier. As they wrote many of the Monkee's music (and a few from Neil Diamond) this tune sounds tailor made for Davy Jone of the Monkee's Mickey Dolenz probably could of pulled this off also. Robert at 67.
and I heard from somewhere (I think it was on Facebook) that Stella Stevens was indeed suffering from dementia, that's so sad considering how young and vital she was in this movie, as a progressive, "with-it" nun! :(
My guess is that they tried to get Hayley Mills back and she said "No way". At least for what they wanted to pay. Her character's uncle was named George, and Stella Stevens plays Sister George. Coincidence? Maybe not. I think it was supposed to be Hayley playing Sister George, who took her uncle's name as a sort of ironic gesture. Stella plays the "young nun with fresh ideas", but they couldn't pass her off as the former Mary Clancy, so they didn't try. They just put another young nun character in to take Mary's place.
Nine for me , 6,7 and were the worse years , early teen age years in a small Canadian town in Ontario . It was like a detention centre , they let us go home at night.
The St. Francis boys' school scenes were filmed at the Germantown Academy in Fort Washington, PA; just outside of Philadelphia. In fact, I worked not too far from there.
This is the first movie I ever saw at a movie theater. I loved the movie, and this is my favorite scene. My mother, two sisters and I sat threw it 4 times! I'm 63, and still love it.
ha! I had forgotten we used to stay as long as we wanted once we were in
Me too! I'm younger, but loved it!
I remember that my Sister entered the contest to be One of the Extras in the film. some magazine was picking One Girl from Each State that the Bus Traveled thru . . .She made it to the Finals, but looked too much like Susan St. James . . .
I remember seeing it with my sister in the movie theater 🎭 as well ,, Still love it to this day
@@Marcel_Audubon Catholic mosh pit...
That is me on the drums.
I am 69 living in Colorado born in L.A.
Is this Boyce and Hart playing? Was this a real band? What was their name?
Interesting! When was this filmed (summer/fall of '67(?). - did you wear your own clothes or they picked them out for you - was 12 at the time only vaguely aware of the "mod" look though listened to the Association, the Turtles, and even some Aretha.
Groovy baby!
I really loved that song as a child. So different than other songs.
Thats awesome man
"We should have a dance like this at the end of each term!" RIP Stella Stevens 😇💃🌪
She was such a good actress in the more obscure roles she portrayed including The Ballad of Cable Hogue and The Poseidon Adventure, as well as working with Elvis Presley, for example. I didn't know she had passed, thank you for sharing.
This song has been stuck in my head for 55 years. Was raised by nuns, so Mom tuned into this every time it aired.
It wasn't long after this the church started having folk masses, where we played soft rock songs, instead of those boring hymns. I learned guitar and got in the group. We'd jokingly call Sunday service a "gig". lol
Those were such better days.
I still dance like this. lol
Hymns aren't boring.
I have been singing this song for 40 years… I love this movie
not even close to that old and same
I remember watching this when I was a kid. This dance clip really captures the feel of the 60s. Like magic to watch it now...
This is exactly what it was like. I still remember seeing fishnet stockings and white go-go boots when I was in 1st grade. This era didn't last long - maybe 1964ish to about 1970.
The mod look here was replaced by the hippie look of the early 70s which compared to mod was actually kind of drab - I remember the girls’ brown suede shoulder bags with fringe - in fact aside from denim everything seemed to be brown. For guys the brown belt with the peace symbol buckle. Then color returned and we got into the polyester 70s - questionable taste but there was a right way to do it and a wrong way.
Yeah, those big baby doll dresses like the one that Susan Saint James was wearing, those were made popular by Twiggy. Me too regarding this dance sequence, it is the most memorable for me as well. I was a little kid who wanted to be mod like the big kids and this dance clip was really groovy!
Também assisti este filme ainda criança. Talvez eu tivesse 8 anos, não lembro ao certo,mas lembro que o filme era bastante divertido, já a música naquele tempo não gostava;hoje em dia gosto.
E alguém observou que o rapaz altão dança feito um louco e fica o tempo todo desprezando a Mary Clarence?
Rosalind Russell had the best lines of anyone in this movie and she delivered them with her customary great timing. My mother took me to see this when I was ten. I was the only one who got to go because the other siblings were misbehaving. My mom and I loved it and later I bought the video and played it many times. Of course, we liked The Trouble With Angels even more with Miss Russell and the incomparable Hayley Mills. Having a Catholic upbringing, my family and I could really relate to these movies.
likewise - great movies growing up....
rextrek, I'm glad you enjoyed this fun and uplifting comedy with the great Rosalind Russell and the vibrant Stella Stevens! They don't make movies like these anymore so it's a good thing we have videos and DVDs to go back to them as many times as possible.
Being a Catholic is tough!
I saw it on T.V. at 11 in 1969. It was great.
"They'er so disposable"...LOL!!
This movie was released at the end of 1968 in Japan. I wrote to Susan Saint James. Several months later, I
received her portrait with her own autograph !!
Now I'm 70, I still like her.
my mom took us kids to see this at the movies....I was 8 in 68
Saw this on Easter Sunday in 1968 with my mom. I was 11. Always loved the song and music
She's gone now but we enjoyed this so much.
Nothing more precious than our favorite memories involving loved ones and things we've shared!
Best time in life to be in that era & time, the memories wow puts a tear in my eyes, NEVER AGAIN will life be so GREAT!! Wish I go back in time!!
You are so right. Better, innocent times.
I'm right there with you Jeanette !!! ❤
@@fd4576 😄👏👏
@@user-st7gd9pg8y 👏👏😁
The sixties were so fun! The clothes, the music, the dances! Such a blast!
So glad you posted the clip. I was actually one of the extras in this movie. I was the youngest boy in the boys school scenes.
What a time and place to be that age.
I was 13. I’m 68 now. Saw it the theatre.
This movie is so sixties, love it.
My mother was 19 years old and I was born that year of 1968. Great time !
My all time favorite movie of the 1960's! Captured my imagination as a 9 year old. Made me proud to be Catholic back then.
I love how Marvel Ann chases the tall guy around the dance floor and he ignores her.
This song makes me feel happy, even if just for few minutes. I don't think I have ever really been happy in my life.
Quadriplegic??
Me neither. Others may have it worse, but I've always had a hard time.
The nuns convinced me that being happy was wrong or seflish.
Take care of your body and your mind and drink water and move your body. Just walk someplace beautiful if you can. Or walk while thinking of things that can make you smile. Whatever is wrong in the world is easier to deal with when you try to be as well as possible.
I don't know anything about you, so i hope that didn't sound inconsiderate or ignorant. I just care, and am sharing what helps me be functional.
If this is what makes you smile, just get more of it. Maybe i'll send you some clips that are fun like this. The more minutes you spend getting those little hormonal lifts, the more your brain seeks and finds it randomly. This is how the brain works, and i am just getting good at it after taking care of my mom.
Mom had Alzheimer's and was dying of cancer. I found what made her happy, sought it out on youtube, and created playlists for her. She spent half the day giggling at cute animals and babies and stuff. Eventually her suicidal emotions got replaced, and she succombed to the cancer without going to those dark places again. She had a peaceful passing with me holding her hand.
What i learned is that creating a positive emotional climate is how you overcome darkness.
Life and death are what we fill them with, i guess you could say.
This song, brings back so many childhood memories
Roz Russell was one of the greats!
Written by the great Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. This is rock and roll dudes!
I remember renting this from the library when I was maybe 7 or 8. I’m 29 and still think of this song.
I have been watching this movie since I was a kid in the 70’s and now watching as a senior tonight.
Natural, beautiful girls. Not a Kardashian or an "instagram model" in sight.
Lol, You took the words right out of my mouth with that one, God bless.
classy people
Real People That enjoyed life with whoever they were with!
Honey, there was no Instagram or Kardashians back then.
Your absolutely so right! Foreals they dontmake them like that anymore!
I loooooved this song and movies! Still my fave 50 years later!
Ah...Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. The would later join ranks with Monkees Davy Jones and Mickey Dolenz to form Dolenz, Jones, Boyce and Hart and record and tour. I saw them at Disneyland in Anaheim decades ago. Peter Tork joined them as a guest. It was fantastic.
Years ago, I ran into Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones (they played earlier in the evening) after hours at Magic Mountain with a friend who was an employee. Talk about silly. We could barely see each other, but had such a fun, and intimate chat. The old days so simple and carefree.
Brings back memories as a young girl. :) This song is STILL a banger!!
Susan St James was the girl in the yellow dress! I love this movie because I grew up in a catholic background and spent 12 years in catholic school! So true to my life except for the dancing part! It never happened at my school! Rosalind Russel and Stella Stevens were excellent together. Great chemistry!!!!
I absolutely love this song. It takes me back to the first time I heard it back in 1978 in Las Vegas. I don’t remember the name of the casino but they had a place for us underage kids to go and play games and watch movies while the grown ups gambled. They were showing this movie and I fell in love with it, Where Angels Go Trouble Follows. And I still rewatch it every time it comes on. Good times, thanks for the memories.❤
"Good. So disposable." Reverend Mother throws some of the best shade ever!
She does! Doesn't she- lol!!
Teenagers and Nuns what a winning combination. I love this scene from this fabulous movie. Susan Saint James looks adorable. They don't make movies like this anymore.
I think you mean Susan Saint James……
@@radamik i changed it.
gotta love the dancing, and the "flood ready" trousers! the dancing looks like a million times more fun then any kind of dancing you see nowadays...holy fuck! when did I get old!?
True about the "floods" - even on the cover of Abbey Road which came out in '69 the Beatles' pants look too short - by 72-73 when I was in high school pants had to be long enough - of course when platform shoes came in they could be pretty long but you wouldn't walk on them. They were flared by that time with big wide cuffs.
I had a foster sister in the late 60s, I was about 5 and she was 15. She always dressed cute, and my parents let her use a record player in her room, and I would sit with her, listening to her 45's and picking me up to dance. She took me to my first shopping mall! Lol.. unfortunately, after several months with us, she had to go back to her home. I came back from kindergarten one day and when I got home, I noticed she was gone, my parents told me and my older brother she had to go home. I cried so much, my dad held me. Luckily, months later, we got to see her. She had family living next door to my aunt and uncle! My hometown use to be smaller, so it's like everyone knew each other or somehow related. My hometown has grown considerably since the 60s, but it still has that close knit feeling... sometimes too close when you don't want to run into someone you know. 😳
This always brings me joy.
poor Marvel Anne tried to get that boy to notice her and he was more interested in dancing with himself! LOL!
+Brian Telford Eventually, however, Marvel Ann does win over the heart of a cowboy. LOL
all's well that ends well, then! (y)
I think the guy was going after Rosabelle, but Susan St. James kept moving around on the dance floor.
I thought the same thing. She was so cute and just wanted someone to dance with her. I sure would have!
love love love this movie. all day.
I think a lot of those kids were dancers on American Bandstand. Love this !
I was one of the extras in the movie. The girls were mostly beauty contest winners and the boys were all kids from Germantown academy where they filmed in Ft Washington, pa
Excellent Movie AND Song!💕🎵
My favorite part of this scene is the sign that says, "Go to chapel sometime... Father Chase gets lonely." !
My mom, Love this movie so much. and so do my Dad, my Sister and I.
Such a fun film to have fun with.
I Love it.
I cannot believe Susan Saint James was 22 years old at the time.
I remember when at 4Yrs old being at the Drive-In and doing a hard "Shimmy" to this song🥰✨
Hermoso recuerdo cuando la fui a ver al cine en 1968..
A great family movie
Love the 👗's and the hair cuts~beautiful girls, and very smart. The wonderful women of this WORLD
My high school sweetheart, Martel Day, was the drummer in this scene. We lived near Philly, and he was in several bands that were connected to DJ in Philadelphia. The members this band were from our high school, Brandywine High School, in Wilmington, Delaware.
Samuel Salva said it was him on the drums.
💕 I would sing this song, in my room..😃funny sitting drinking some tea, and it came to Mind.‼ Wow❗
Catholic sponsored fun time memories. I still remember the carnivals dances at church the rides lights and happy families..rich or poor catholic's let you have good let your hair down good time even lighting cherry bombs..these are Memorable delights...peace too all..luv you all. Play it again!!
Fun good memories. Do t forget church bizarres and fish fry'
S
@@windstorm1000 Yes, Indeed! Thank you for sharing. Peace.
I can’t tell you how much I love this.
I love this movie. Used to watch it on channel 11 usually on the weekend in the 80s 😁
LOVE this movie ....Hayley Mills is my favorite! This song was the attraction to this movie, then I was curious about the movie in the 70's....Agreed to previous comment, simply MAGIC!
sorry, sweetie, Hayley Mills ain't in this movie … you're thinking of The Trouble with Angels, this is Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows
I like to think if Hayley Mills had appeared in this movie her character would've been like younger hipper nun Sister George. I wouldn't be shocked if they actually were developing Sister George with Hayley Mills' character Mary from The Trouble with Angels in mind but getting Hayley for the sequel didn't work out so they retooled the character to become someone completely new for a different actress (Stella Stevens).
In my head, this is what a dance should STILL be like!!! ❤
Groovy to the max! Nerdy and ultrahip at the same time!
Okay , what the heck !!! Why isn't this fantastic, psychedelic version by this adorable group of mod boys and the whole awesome soundtrack by "Lalo Shifrin" remastered onto cd ???? The Boyce and Hart version lacks the raw 'garage band' purity of this one , it really rocks ! I love when the break comes and all kids are kinda "mosh jumpin" together , still effective ! This is one of my all time favs from my childhood , part of the "Vatican II" years, I was right there as the nuns habits got shorter and they were actually allowed to start being people ! For all those who kick this movie to the curb , my previous Catholic training suggests I don't tell you "where" to go ! Groovy and sweet and yes , SOOOOO MUCH COOLER and better than the first ! It wasn't that far off the mark , in second grade I had this lovely new nun dressed in "full penguin", but by third grade she returned as a lay person , decked out in a suede mini skirt and boots !!! Yes, the times they were a' changing. Still , our hearts remained intact. I understood the struggle.
I agree. The Boyce & Hart single version is anodyne compared with this.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw RIGHT !!!.......with all the crap out there released over the years, I still would love to get this soundtrack restored and remastered, complete with extras like this "awesome teenage garage band's input. Let's face it...... it's just "groovy man" !!! 🤣♥️☮️
@@FD-tu9rt Amen to that. This film deserves the deluxe treatment, both visually and aurally, with lots of extras: interviews, commentaries and the like.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw AWESOME !!!!.........Now , how do we get anyone to do it ?!!! Sadly , most of the people originally alive ( my generation ) have passed on and though it has a cult following it's too "feel good" for today's market , sadly. Let's hope 👍🙏☮️
The Good Old Days!
I loved this movie as well. It was a very clean respectable movie about teens growing up. So Cool , I was about 6 years old when this came out.
Where does the time go.....I remember watching this when I was a kid.
RIP Stella Stevens
man,,,,,I haven't seen this in over 40 years!!!! oh the joy of a youth of innocence !!!!
I remember seeing this movie, back in 3rd grade in grade school in the school auditorium... Don't recall much of the movie, but I was always fond of this song. All these years later it takes me back to that day in grade school, so many years ago.
I am loving that base ❤
"Sister Celestine...CELESTINE!!!" XD
This song still in my mind, since my parents took me to the drive in and we watch it. 🎶
love this movie and the music
Thank you for posting this video.
I love this version.
=)
Thanks For The Post 🎅
We loved the movie because they went to Dorney Park in the time we knew it best.
This was the best time of Vatican II IF YOU WERE in Catholic school.
I loved this movie! It was good clean and funny. This song was cute and I enjoyed Stella Stevens and Rosalind Russell (hope I spelled it right)😊.in this tale of coming of age...
And let's not forget Van Johnson as a priest (miss those kind of movies with those types of stars)...blessings
This is actually better than the Boyce and Heart original.
yes, hands down , its the throbbing guitar , and clarity , when I was 12 I wanted this version , but I could only see the movie so many times , but here we are .
I know , I've been trying to find out for years if these "boys" were real and actually recorded this version . That awesome , kinda sinister sound effect when they repeat "trouble follows" is so 60's and soooo cool ! It blows the "Boyce and Hart" version out the window. If anyone knows anything about this version from the dance scene , please post it. 👍
WTTW channel 11 Chicago would rerun this on Saturday or Sunday afternoons and during their annual pledge drive in the 80's.
Saw this movie when it came out. Thought it was cool back then. How time does fly by fast.
LOL. The girls shortened their skirts. We did the same thing back then and we weren't even in Parochial School. In the morning when we left the house to go to school, our hems were at our knees. When we got to school, we would roll our waistbands up so that our hems were about 6 inches above our knees! We did this every day. We also put eye makeup on in the school bathrooms, and washed it off before we went home. It was such an innocent time for us. ❤❤❤
What an awesome clip!
This version is better then the Boyce and Hart version if nothing else because of the eerie but interesting high harmonizing part behind the lead singer, and the plucky base guitar. I was about 12/13 when this came out. My square-ish dad cringed in his seat during this tune at the walk in theater in 1968. Robert at 68.
Yes, wonderfully weird background vocals! Gotta wonder how they came up with that.
Absolutely Love this masterpiece 😍.
That tall guys just blows off Marvelanne just to dance by himself. lol! I love this part of the movie. My mom said this is how they dressed back when she was that age.
I think that tall guy didn't like girls- lol!
@@allanhernandez2508 😂😂😂😂 Probably lol. He was too much into his dancing.
The guy with the striped shirt...obviously was the star of this scene.... he's a pretty good dancer....
Ed Reid I just watched an American bandstand vid and I swear I saw him dancing look it up titled Archie’s sugar sugar -American Bandstand
J.C. Penny clothing line.
He’s got the rhythm all right!
@@dianesingerman9650 😂...It is a catchy tune..Id watch it every time it was on television as a kid.. and they play it in every scene..I still watch it..Stella Stevens just passed..😢
@@JacQuie1776 Hello..sorry I missed your comment...I think I saw him on American Bandstand..😂
This is the best version of the theme song. I like the part when the female accompaniment joins in a couple of times.
I don't think that's a girl. I believe it's a guy singing falsetto (a la Frankie Valli).
@@KarenAlexandrite-aka-PinkRose I agree
The dancing! Love it
Lead singer is wearing 'Beatle boots', those things were already on the 'outs' and becoming outdated by '68, young folks were already into wearing 'desert boots', moccasins, and other shoes. That the J.C. Penney's 'Mod' look clothing and the big metal belt buckle catalog, that is a bit of a stretch, being popularized somewhat by The Monkees in about '66...Robert at 67.
❤I Love this movie and this song!! So innocent and sweet!"the clothes, the music, style, everything ❤❤ 3:50
7,8,9 Get those 3 out that line. Mother superiors reaction to the students and her Nuns in a protest line. Make me laugh every time.
I need that pink and silver dress. STAT!
Except no Mexican kids. We were there too. I’m one of them
"Those things!" and "So disposible!"...LOL!!
Stella Stevens even looks good as a nun.
A love... Love.. Movie🤗... A love sound... A love... 60s...❤😊
That tall dude in the stripe shirt didn't want to dance with the girl 0:20 LOL!
Rock clássico dos 60s de Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart - Where Angels Go Trouble Follows
The mini skirt was a big trend in 67/68. In July of 67 my dad drove the whole family to N Y for the day ( we were from Pa,) and on Broadway in the Wall Street area at lunchtime we saw a young woman with her skirt well above the knee - first time my Mom had seen that - and I remember the skirt was green. A whim of memory that never left. I think 1969 was when they were the shortest - the following year they tried to do longer skirts but it bombed. Was too soon. They caught on eventually but it took a few years.
I love this movie!
@3:23-Is that a photo of Stella Stevens? (left of Dean Martin)...that would be funny...
I noticed that too!
What l understand now is this is Boyce and Hart (studio musicians), but the movie version of this song l actually like better than the 45 single radio version cuz it sounds trippier. As they wrote many of the Monkee's music (and a few from Neil Diamond) this tune sounds tailor made for Davy Jone of the Monkee's Mickey Dolenz probably could of pulled this off also. Robert at 67.
Agreed! I can't find either version on itunes or for sales. The dance scene version is so great -- it's not available.
and I heard from somewhere (I think it was on Facebook) that Stella Stevens was indeed suffering from dementia, that's so sad considering how young and vital she was in this movie, as a progressive, "with-it" nun! :(
So sad...:( terrible disease.
My guess is that they tried to get Hayley Mills back and she said "No way". At least for what they wanted to pay. Her character's uncle was named George, and Stella Stevens plays Sister George. Coincidence? Maybe not.
I think it was supposed to be Hayley playing Sister George, who took her uncle's name as a sort of ironic gesture. Stella plays the "young nun with fresh ideas", but they couldn't pass her off as the former Mary Clancy, so they didn't try. They just put another young nun character in to take Mary's place.
the band are rocking some seriously cool suede beatle boots!
Still here in Feb 2022. Love Susan Saint James! Also love the tall dude who dances around without a care and snubs the annoying blond. 😂💕
This is so much FUN!!!
This was played in 1968, that was a night those guys will never forget.
So the guys must be over 70 years old by now.
Yep, yep, those watchful nuns. l went through 12 years of Catholic schools😀
Nine for me , 6,7 and were the worse years , early teen age years in a small Canadian town in Ontario . It was like a detention centre , they let us go home at night.
Loving the spectacular clothes ❤.
The St. Francis boys' school scenes were filmed at the Germantown Academy in Fort Washington, PA; just outside of Philadelphia. In fact, I worked not too far from there.