The Parent Trap (1961)

Movie · 1961 · Comedy, Family, Romance · 2h 9m · G · English

Curator score: 7.1/10 (26.5K ratings)

Caught in a merry marital mix-up!

Overview

Two identical twin sisters, separated at birth by their parents' divorce, are reunited years later at a summer camp, where they scheme to bring their parents back together. The girls, one of whom has been living with their mother and the other with their father, switch places after camp and go to work on their plan, the first objective being to scare off a gold-digger pursuing their father.

Ratings

Director

David Swift

Production

Walt Disney Productions

Cast

Hayley Mills, Maureen O'Hara, Brian Keith, Charles Ruggles, Cathleen Nesbitt, Una Merkel, Joanna Barnes, Linda Watkins, Crahan Denton, Leo G. Carroll, Ruth McDevitt, Nancy Kulp, Irene Tedrow, Frank De Vol, Kay Cole, Barbara Hunter, Lynette Winter, Joseph Richard Stafford, John Mills, Herschel Graham

Where to watch

Disney Plus

Curator Review

Verdict

A charming, polished family comedy with real star power, clever twin-switch hijinks, and enough warmth to make the sentimental ending land. It runs long and can feel old-fashioned, but the performances, fashion, and playful premise still hold up well.

Best for

  • fans of classic Disney live-action films
  • viewers who like wholesome family comedies
  • people who enjoy twin-swap or identity-mischief stories
  • audiences looking for a nostalgic 1960s movie

Skip if

  • you want fast pacing and modern jokes
  • you dislike sentimental family reconciliation plots
  • you prefer subtle comedy over broad, playful farce

Overview

The Parent Trap is one of those studio-era family movies that knows exactly how to sell its premise: bright colors, clean comic timing, and a lead performance that has to do a lot of heavy lifting and does. The twin-switch setup is simple, but the movie keeps finding new ways to wring humor and affection out of it without losing its easygoing charm.

Worth noting

What gives it staying power is the combination of mischief and sincerity. The girls’ scheme is funny, but the movie is really about longing for family and the fantasy of making adults behave better than they do. That emotional core keeps it from feeling like just a gimmick, even when the runtime starts to stretch.

Bottom line

It’s also a great showcase for 1960s Disney gloss: crisp production design, appealing costumes, and a breezy tone that makes the whole thing feel like a summer memory. Some viewers will find it overlong or too tidy, but for classic family entertainment it remains a very easy recommendation.

Top Letterboxd reviews

Tess (5★) · 741 likes

When they walk in the fake park. Iconic.

Ryan Terry (4.5★) · 448 likes

What if I told you that the Lindsay Lohan Parent Trap was good, but that this one was better?

juli (5★) · 403 likes

every two seconds a character mentions how beautiful maureen o'hara is and i absolutely approve of that.

ty (3★) · 260 likes

I’d like to apologise to Lindsay Lohan for watching this one and not her masterpiece

Japeth (3★) · 260 likes

One girl comes from Boston, the other comes from California. And somehow they both have British accents.

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Topics

family comedy, romantic comedy, sibling dynamics, identity swap, summer camp, 1960s, nostalgic, wholesome, lighthearted, classic Disney

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