The Monkees Movies
American television producers for NBC created the Monkees as an antidote for the Beatle-mania that had flooded the nation with records, live concerts, and a very successful feature film, Hard Days Night! (1964). They were designed to star in a free-form (one might dub it surrealism lite) weekly comedy that featured the fabricated four trying to extricate themselves from a variety of wacky situations. The show in some ways was a precursor to music videos in that it contained one or two creatively photographed musical interludes. After a series of rigorous auditions and screen tests, the producers weeded through 500 applicants, including musician
Stephen Stills who was rejected for having improper hair and bad teeth, to cast
Mickey Dolenz,
Peter Tork,
David Jones, and
Michael Nesmith. All four had previous musical experience:
Jones had recorded an album and sung with the cast of the Broadway show Oliver! on the Ed Sullivan Show -- ironically on the same night the Beatles appeared; Nesmith, using the name Michael Blessing, had recorded and written the hit single "Different Drum" for the Stone Ponies; Tork could play several instruments and was a member of the New York folk scene; and Dolenz had been a child star (billed as Mickey Braddock) on the television series
Circus Boy (1956-1958) and was playing in a L.A. band at the time he became a Monkee. But though all were musicians, they did not mesh well in the studio sessions created before the show aired and producer
Don Kirshner was brought in to produce their first couple of albums (many of their songs were penned by Boyce and Hart). Kirshner insisted on using session players for their first two albums. The Monkees however, gained control on the third, Headquarters, and on it played most of the instruments themselves. The Monkees' first single, "The Last Train to Clarksville," was released before the show first aired in 1966 and became the first of a series of hits.
The group attained almost instant star status and, within a year, the hot teen idols were touring and attempting to play their own music, something that caused initial embarrassment when they didn't sound nearly as good as they did on the record. However, the Monkees honed their skills, with Tork already knowing how to play several instruments, and became quite competent. By 1968, the foursome had grown tired of being clean-cut teen idols. Together with director
Bob Rafelson, who wrote the script with actor
Jack Nicholson, they created
Head. Psychedelic, angry, surreal, and at times funny, it was simultaneously an attempt for the world to see them, not as teeny-bopper fodder, but as grown young men who were hip to the times and a symbolic biting of the hand that fed them. The film certainly achieved its goal.
Head's low ratings resulted in the show's cancellation. As a group they recorded a couple more times, and then disbanded, only to again reunite, sans
Mike Nesmith, who was busy making innovative music videos and working on his distinguished solo career. Each Monkee has appeared separately on different television shows and in feature films. Their group was the subject of a televised documentary, Hey! Hey! We're the Monkees, in 1996 and in 1997, the four appeared on a television special and reminisced about their old show in the same format as the previous venue. The Monkees continued recording and in 1997 completed Justus, which featured all their own material and no studio musicians. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 2002
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- Add The Monkees: Live Summer Tour to Queue
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More than 30 years after becoming pop idols, the Monkees (well, three of them) hit the road to play their biggest hits in front of adoring fans. This video captures one of the stops on that tour. Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork, and Davy Jones plow through 18 fan favorites, including "I'm a Believer," "Last Train to Clarksville," "Pleasant Valley Sunday," and "Daydream Believer." ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- 2001
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- 1997
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This program features music videos for the songs from the Monkees' 1996 reunion album Justus, which was the band's first album release since 1968 that included all four original Monkees. Justus was the one and only Monkees album where every track was written, played, and produced by the bandmembers. The videos included are "Admiral Mike," "Circle Sky," "Oh What a Night," "Regional Girl," "Run Away From Life," and "You And I." Also included is behind-the-scenes footage. ~ Steve Blackburn, Rovi
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- 1996
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- Add Hey, Hey We're the Monkees to Queue
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Seeking to capitalize on the popularity of the Fab Four -- the Beatles -- in 1966, television executives dreamed up what wags labeled the "Pre-Fab Four," but which the executives called the Monkees. The Monkees TV series scored such a hit that the concocted TV characters began to actually tour as a band, and achieved six Top Ten hits. Hey Hey We're the Monkees is a 1997 retrospective documentary that traces the career path of the band from its sitcom origins all the way to Justus, the album released 25 years after the Monkees' heyday. In interviews, Monkees Peter Tork, Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Davy Jones make the point that they did indeed play their own instruments, contrary to the gossip of the day. Each band member also reveals his favorite television episode. Program highlights include screen tests and performance footage from the combo's early days, as well as a solo Nesmith performance. ~ Steve Blackburn, Rovi
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- 1982
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This entertaining "commercial" video gives us over fifty celebrities pushing their favorite, wild product. ~ Rovi
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- 1968
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- Add Head to Queue
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The Monkees -- Micky Dolenz, Mike Nesmith, Davy Jones and Peter Tork -- didn't really enjoy being labelled the Prefab Four back when their TV series was all the rage in 1966. With the help and support of Bob Rafaelson (co-producer, co-writer and director) and Jack Nicholson (co-producer, co-writer, and, if you look closely, bit player), the Monkees expressed their displeasure over being packaged for popular consumption in the non sequitur masterpiece Head. At least, it seems that the film is an indictment of the merchandising of pop stars. It's hard to tell at times, because Head literally has no plot; it is instead a patchwork of loopy sight gags, instant parodies, "camp" cutups, musical numbers and wry inside jokes. Clips of such old movies as the 1934 Karloff-Lugosi epic The Black Cat pop up every so often, as does an impressive lineup of pop-culture icons: Victor Mature, Annette Funicello, Sonny Liston, Frank Zappa (he's the one leading a cow) and Ray Nitschke, as well as such movie-trivia "answers" as Timothy Carey, Vito Scotti, Teri Garr, Percy Helton, Logan Ramsey, Carol Doda, and pre-Divine cross-dresser T.C. Jones. The best bits include a lengthy Golden Boy parody which does double duty as a lampoon of the network's efforts to create "personalities" for the individual Monkees, and a psychedelic buck-and-wing performed by Davy Jones. One gag, in which Micky Dolenz blows up a Coca Cola machine, is usually excised from TV showings. Head did zero business when it first came out thanks to poor distribution, but it has since become a fixture of midnight-movie showings and campus cinema classes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Peter Tork, Davy Jones, (more)