The Beach (film)
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| The Beach | |
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The Beach poster |
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| Directed by | Danny Boyle |
| Produced by | Andrew Macdonald |
| Written by | Alex Garland (novel) John Hodge (screenplay) |
| Starring | Leonardo DiCaprio Tilda Swinton Robert Carlyle Virginie Ledoyen |
| Music by | Angelo Badalamenti John Cale Brian Eno |
| Cinematography | Darius Khondji |
| Editing by | Masahiro Hirakubo |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | February 2, 2000 |
| Running time | 119 min. |
| Country | UK/USA |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $50,000,000 |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
The Beach is a 2000 drama film by the Trainspotting team of writer John Hodge, producer Andrew Macdonald and director Danny Boyle based on The Beach, a 1996 novel by Alex Garland. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Tilda Swinton, Robert Carlyle, Virginie Ledoyen and Guillaume Canet.
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| Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (November 2007) |
A young American man, Richard (Leonardo DiCaprio), travels to Thailand. During a stay on Khaosan Road in Bangkok, he meets a mysterious man named Daffy (Robert Carlyle), who tells him about a secret beach paradise. Richard then heads for southern Thailand in search of the island. Along the way, he is befriended by a young French couple, Françoise (Virginie Ledoyen) and Étienne (Guillaume Canet), and he shares the secret of the island with them.
The three then strike out across the water with inflatable bags and whatever they can carry. They reach the island, where they find a huge marijuana plantation. Heading further inland, they eventually find the hidden beach, where a small, suspicious clan of Western travellers has settled, and is led by a strong-willed woman, Sal (Tilda Swinton).
The three newcomers then struggle to find their place in the Utopian community.
- Leonardo DiCaprio as Richard
- Tilda Swinton as Sal
- Virginie Ledoyen as Françoise
- Guillaume Canet as Étienne
- Robert Carlyle as Daffy
- Paterson Joseph as Keaty
- Lars Arentz-Hansen as Bugs
- Peter Youngblood Hills as Zeph
- Jerry Swindall as Sammy
- Zelda Tinska as Sonja
- Victoria Smurfit as Weathergirl
- Daniel Caltagirone as Unhygienix
- Peter Gevisser as Gregorio
- Lidija Zovkic as Mirjana
- Samuel Gough as Guitarman
Although there are many minor alterations to the characters and plot, the film remains fairly faithful to the novel. There are, however, a few major alterations:
- Françoise's elopement with Richard does not occur in the novel, although he is tempted and believes she may be too. In the film, it serves to alienate Étienne from the rest of the group and he becomes the permanent nurse of Christo, who is dying following the shark attack. In the novel this nurse role is filled by another character, Jed, who feels alienated for different reasons. Jed does not appear at all in the film.
- Richard's sexual encounter with Sal does not occur in the novel. The voyage to the mainland is undertaken by Richard and Jed, whom Richard has been accompanying on lookout duty on the island. Jed finds out about the map left by Richard and suggests that they don't tell Sal about the potential new arrivals. In the film Sal finds out about the map during the excursion to the mainland, and initiates sex in return for keeping the secret. Later she puts Richard on lookout duty alone after spotting the newcomers attempting to cross to the island.
- The ending differs significantly from the novel. While in both film and novel the annual celebration is ruined by the intrusion of the dope farmers, in the novel this is not before Richard, Françoise, Étienne, Keaty and Jed have made plans to secretly leave the island. The dope farmers come with the map they found after killing the newcomers, angry that the islanders appear to be advertising their community, and it becomes clear that Richard is responsible. The rest of the islanders attack him before his four fellow planners come to his defense and they all escape on the raft brought over by the newcomers. In the film, the dope farmers appear to give Sal the opportunity to kill Richard in order to keep the community; she attempts to shoot him, but the gun isn't loaded. The entire community then leaves Sal, apparently via the raft, shocked by her dedication to the community at any cost.
- In the film, Richard is American, while Sal is British. In the novel, their nationalities are opposite of their film incarnations.
Controversy arose during the making of the film due to 20th Century Fox's bulldozing and landscaping of the natural beach setting of Ko Phi Phi Leh to make it more "paradise-like". The production altered some sand dunes and cleared some coconut trees and grass to widen the beach. Fox set aside a fund to reconstruct and return the beach to its natural state, however lawsuits were filed by environmentalists who believed the damage to the ecosystem was permanent and restoration attempts had failed.[1]
The lawsuits dragged on for years. In 2006, Thailand's Supreme Court upheld an appeal court ruling that the filming had harmed the environment and ordered that damage assessments be made. Defendants in the case included 20th Century Fox and some Thai government officials.[2]
After the film premiered in Thailand in 2000, some Thai politicians were upset at the way Thailand was depicted in the film, and called for it to be banned. The depiction of the drugs culture gave Thailand a bad image and a Buddha image in a bar was cited as "blasphemous."[3]
According to the Lonely Planet's Thailand guidebook, the 2004 tsunami dramatically improved the look of Maya Bay (the actual name of the beach where the movie was filmed). This was due to the fact that the high waves had cleaned up the beach and removed all the landscaping the Fox production team had added.[citation needed]
| Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (November 2007) |
- Leonardo DiCaprio received a Worst Actor Razzie nomination for his performance in this film. [1].
| The Beach: Motion Picture Soundtrack | |||||
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| Soundtrack by various artists | |||||
| Released | 21 February 2000 | ||||
| Genre | Rock Electronica Britpop |
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| Length | 76:53 | ||||
| Label | Sire | ||||
| Producer | Pete Tong | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Danny Boyle film soundtrack chronology | |||||
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The soundtrack for the film features "8 Ball" by Underworld, as well as tracks by Orbital, Moby, Blur, New Order, Faithless, Leftfield, and others. The song, "Touched" by VAST was included in the movie, but omitted from the soundtrack. The All Saints song "Pure Shores" topped the UK Singles Chart. The soundtrack was co-produced by Pete Tong.
The film score was composed by Angelo Badalamenti, and a separate album containing selections of his score was released as well.
- "Snakeblood" (composed by Neil Barnes and Paul Daley; performed by Leftfield) – 5:39
- "Pure Shores" (composed by William Orbit and Shaznay Lewis; performed by All Saints) – 4:24
- "Porcelain" (composed and performed by Moby) – 3:58
- "Voices" (composed by Stephen Spencer, Paul Geoffrey Spencer & Scott Rosser; performed by Dario G featuring Vanessa Quinones) – 5:19
- "8 Ball" (composed by Rick Smith and Karl Hyde; performed by Underworld) – 8:51
- "Spinning Away" (composed by Brian Eno and John Cale; performed by Sugar Ray) – 4:24
- "Return of Django" (composed by Lee "Scratch" Perry; performed by the Asian Dub Foundation featuring Harry Beckett and Simon De Souza) – 4:17
- Originally performed by The Upsetters
- "On Your Own (Crouch End Broadway Mix)" (composed and performed by Blur) – 3:32
- "Yéké Yéké (Hardfloor Edit)" (composed and performed by Mory Kante; remix by Hardfloor) – 3:55
- "Woozy" (composed and performed by Faithless) – 7:53
- "Richard, It's Business As Usual" (composed and performed by Barry Adamson) – 4:17
- "Brutal" (composed and performed by New Order) – 4:49
- "Lonely Soul" (composed by Richard Ashcroft, Wil Malone & J. Davis; performed by UNKLE featuring Richard Ashcroft) – 8:53
- "Beached" (composed by Angelo Badalamenti; performed by Orbital and Angelo Badalamenti) – 6:45
- ^ Vidal, John. October 29, 1999. DiCaprio film-makers face storm over paradise lost, The Guardian, retrieved via ThaiStudents.com on December 3, 2006.
- ^ The Nation, December 1, 2006. Filming 'damaged beach' (retrieved on December 3, 2006).
- ^ BBC, 9 March, 2000. Thai MPs call for Beach ban (retrieved on December 3, 2000).
- Official Web Site
- The Beach at the Internet Movie Database
- The Beach at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Beach at Box Office Mojo
- Storming "The Beach"
- Backstage on "The Beach"
- Environmental campaign against the movie
- A complete movie reference: pictures, cast, locations, crew
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| Shallow Grave (1994) • Trainspotting (1996) • A Life Less Ordinary (1997) • The Beach (2000) • 28 Days Later (2002) • Millions (2004) • Sunshine (2007) |
Categories: English-language films | Articles to be expanded since November 2007 | All articles to be expanded | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since November 2007 | Films directed by Danny Boyle | 2000 films | American films | British films | 20th Century Fox films | Adventure films | Drama films | Films shot in Super 35 | Films based on fiction books | Psychological thriller films