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ACCIDENTAL
ICON: THE REAL GIDGET STORY
DVD.
Level 33.
Like
most British people, I tend to look at surfing with a degree of
bewilderment and suspicion. Things might be different if we were
in Malibu, but apart from a few desperate wannabes in denial about
our weather, beaches and culture, no-one here can see the point,
and - a few Beach Boys hits aside -the whole scene has never really
caught on, with most people here thinking it is a spectacularly
pointless exercise.
So this documentary is a fascinating, if lightweight, glimpse
into a different world – a world where the Gidget
movies and TV shows, the mention of which I can guarantee would
leave most people here looking at you blankly, are thoroughly
ingrained in the popular culture.
Gidget was a teenage surfer girl who has assorted fluffy adventures
in various movies (and various locations) across a series of films
in the early 1960s, before transferring to television –
the final (to date!) series appearing in the 1980s.I have to confess
I haven’t seen a single one of these, but by all accounts,
they make the Beach Party films of the same era
look gritty in comparison. Nevertheless, they were hugely popular
at the time, making stars out of Sandra Dee and Sally Field, and
probably represent America’s last moment of innocence before
the chaos and social upheaval of the late Sixties – a time
when teenagers were still thoroughly wholesome and respectful
of authority, even while living a supposedly ‘bohemian’
lifestyle.
Gidget was based on a real person – fifteen year old Kathy
Kohner had spent the summer handing with beach bums, learning
to surf and absorbing the local culture, being dubbed 'gidget'
- ie 'girl midget' by the surfers. When she told her writer father
about it, instead of being concerned that his daughter was hanging
out with 20-something slackers all day, he turned it into a novel
- which then became the film, and on to the stuff of legend. Kohner
is interviewed here, alongside a lot of the guys on the scene
at that time (if you have a stereotyped image of a surfer, these
ageing men won’t shatter your illusions), as the documentary
flips from the fictional world of the movies and TV show to the
true story.
It’s entertaining stuff, though at an hour long, it sometimes
feels like it’s padding things out a bit – the influence
that Gidget had on female surfers is significant,
but here hammered home at length, with what seems to be every
woman ever to step foot on a surfboard trotted out to pay homage
and try to explain how being able to stand on an overblown ironing
board for a few seconds in the water is a empowering feminist
experience. On the other hand, the movies and TV shows are rather
rushed through – a cartoon series and assorted TV movies
are only mentioned in passing, and there’s little examination
of where this character fitted in to society as society changed.
I would’ve liked to see some discussion of how 1972 TV movie
Gidget Gets Married either addressed or –
more likely – ignored the social changes of that turbulent
era.
But then, I’m probably missing the point. This is very much
for the fans, and mostly the story of the teenage girl who inspired
the whole franchise. As a look at a part of pop culture than is
fairly alien to me, I found it enjoyable, and even if it didn’t
convince me that either the films or the activity had any real
value, I feel better informed about both now – and that’s
all you can really ask from any documentary film.
DAVID
FLINT
BUY
IT NOW (USA)
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