The Beach (film)

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The Beach
The Beach film.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Danny Boyle
Screenplay by John Hodge
Based on The Beach
by Alex Garland
Produced by Andrew Macdonald
Starring
Cinematography Darius Khondji
Edited byMasahiro Hirakubo
Music by Angelo Badalamenti
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • 11 February 2000 (2000-02-11)
Running time
119 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$50 million [1]
Box office$144.1 million [1]

The Beach is a 2000 adventure drama film directed by Danny Boyle, from a screenplay by John Hodge, based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Alex Garland. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Tilda Swinton, Virginie Ledoyen, Guillaume Canet, and Robert Carlyle. It was filmed on the Thai island of Ko Phi Phi Le.

Contents

The film was released on 11 February 2000, by 20th Century Fox. It was a moderate box office success, grossing $144 million against a $50 million budget, but received mixed-to-negative reviews from critics.

Plot

Richard, a young American backpacker seeking adventure in Bangkok, stays in a drab travelers' hotel on Khao San Road where he meets a young French couple, Françoise and Étienne. He also meets Daffy, who tells him of a pristine, uninhabited island in the Gulf of Thailand with a beautiful hidden beach. Daffy explains that he settled there in secret several years earlier, but difficulties arose and he left. Daffy dies by suicide, leaving Richard a map to the island. Richard persuades Françoise and Étienne to accompany him to the island, and the three travel to Ko Samui. Richard meets two American surfers who have heard rumors of the island and he gives them a copy of the map.

En route to the island, Richard becomes infatuated with Françoise. After swimming to the island from a neighbouring island, they find a cannabis plantation guarded by armed Thai farmers. Avoiding detection, they make their way across the island and meet Keaty, who brings them to a community of travellers living on the island in secret. Sal, the community's English leader, explains that the farmers allow them to stay so long as they keep to themselves and do not allow any more travelers to come to the island. Richard lies that they have not shown the map to anyone else. The trio becomes integrated into the community.

One night, Françoise invites Richard to the beach, where she tells him that she is falling in love with him and they start an affair. Despite hoping to keep it secret, the community finds out. Although he is angry, Étienne says he will not stand in their way if Françoise is happier with Richard.

Sal selects Richard to accompany her on a supply run to Ko Pha Ngan. They encounter the American surfers who are preparing to search for the island and mention Richard's map. Sal is upset but believes Richard when he says they have no copy of the map. To ensure Sal's confidentiality, Richard has sex with her at her order. On their return to the island, Richard lies to Françoise about having sex with Sal.

Three of the community fishermen are attacked by a shark while spearfishing. One is killed and another, Christo, is severely injured. He pleads for medical attention but Sal will only allow him to leave if he promises not to disclose the location of the beach. However, now terrified of the water, Christo refuses to be taken to the mainland for medical treatment but Sal refuses to allow any doctors to be brought to the island to treat him. As the man's condition worsens, the islanders simply leave him in the jungle to die, but Étienne refuses to abandon him.

When the surfers turn up on the neighboring island, Sal orders Richard to send them away and destroy their map. She tells everyone that she and Richard had sex, which leaves Françoise angry and heartbroken, causing her to return to Étienne. Isolated from the group, Richard begins to lose his sanity, imagining that he is conversing with the deceased Daffy.

The surfers reach the island but are discovered and killed by the farmers. Shocked at witnessing their deaths, Richard smothers Christo to put him out of his misery and gathers Françoise and Étienne to leave the island.

Richard is captured by the farmers along with Françoise and Étienne. The farmers are furious with the community for breaking their deal not to allow any more newcomers. The lead farmer gives Sal a gun loaded with a single bullet and orders her to make a choice: kill Richard and the group will be allowed to stay, or else they must all leave immediately. Sal pulls the trigger, but the chamber is empty. Shocked by her willingness to commit murder, the other members of the community abandon Sal, leave the island, and go their separate ways.

Back in the United States, Richard receives an email at an Internet cafe from Françoise with a nostalgic group photograph of the beach community in happier times.

Cast

Virginie Ledoyen portrays Francoise in this film. Virginie Ledoyen Cannes 2012.jpg
Virginie Ledoyen portrays Françoise in this film.

Production

Development

Maya bay in Ko Phi Phi Le Maya Bay Thailand.jpg
Maya bay in Ko Phi Phi Le

Ewan McGregor was cast as the main character before leaving due to disputes with the director. It was speculated that Boyle was offered additional funding under the condition that DiCaprio be cast and his character made American. [2] Whilst promoting T2 Trainspotting on The Graham Norton Show , the dispute was discussed in more depth, with McGregor stating "It was a mis-handling and a mis-understanding over the film and it's a big regret of mine that it went on for so very long... and it didn't matter about The Beach, it was never about that. It was about our friendship. I felt like Danny's actor and it made me a bit rudderless." Boyle stated, "I handled it very very badly and I have apologised to Ewan for it. I felt a great shame about it and how it was handled." [3]

Filming

Members of the cast and crew were involved in a boating accident during production. It was reported that the incident involved both Boyle and DiCaprio. No one was injured. [4]

The beach seen in the film is not the same as in real life. There is a gap between mountains on the actual beach in Thailand. The special effects crew digitally added some of the surrounding mountains during the post-production phase.

The waterfall scene, where DiCaprio and others jump from a high cliff to the water below, was filmed in Khao Yai National Park in central Thailand, at the Haew Suwat Waterfall.

The map in the film was illustrated by the author of the book that The Beach was based upon, Alex Garland. He received credit for this as the cartographer.

In 1999, Hélène de Fougerolles auditioned for the film but casting directors immediately told her that she was not mysterious enough for the character as she arrived with blond hair in pigtails. She asked them if she could "be an extra or serve coffees there, three months in Thailand, it sounds idyllic!". Although firstly reluctant because the actress was already established in the industry, they finally accepted. As journalists were not allowed to come take pictures on set, the only picture the press could have of Guillaume Canet and Virginie Ledoyen before shooting started was their departure at Paris airport with de Fougerolles. They made it the cover of Studio Magazine , from which the international press reported her as officially cast. This eventually lent her lines edited out of the final cut but present in the DVD extras. [5]

Soundtrack

The Beach: Motion Picture Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
various artists
ReleasedFebruary 21, 2000
Genre Electronica, ambient, rock, Britpop
Length76:53
Label Sire
Producer Pete Tong
Danny Boyle film soundtrack chronology
A Life Less Ordinary
(1997)
The Beach: Motion Picture Soundtrack
(2000)
28 Days Later
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg link

The soundtrack for the film, co-produced by Pete Tong, features the international hits "Pure Shores" by All Saints and "Porcelain" by Moby, as well as tracks by New Order, Blur, Underworld, Orbital, Faithless, Sugar Ray, and others. Leftfield's contribution to the soundtrack, "Snakeblood", was found to have sampled Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark's "Almost" without permission, leading to a lawsuit; band member Neil Barnes said he forgot to remove the sample from the finished track. [6] [7] The songs "Synasthasia" by Junkie XL, "Out of Control" by The Chemical Brothers, "Fiesta Conga" by Movin' Melodies, "Redemption Song" by Bob Marley, "Neon Reprise" by Lunatic Calm and "Smoke Two Joints" by Chris Kay and Michael Kay were also included in the movie but omitted from the soundtrack. The teaser trailer for the film featured "Touched" by VAST.

The film score was composed by Angelo Badalamenti, and a separate album containing selections of his score was released as well.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)PerformerLength
1."Snakeblood"Neil Barnes, Paul Daley Leftfield 5:39
2."Pure Shores" (from Saints & Sinners , 2000) William Orbit, Shaznay Lewis All Saints 4:24
3."Porcelain" (from Play , 1999) Moby Moby 3:58
4."Voices" (from Sunmachine , 1998)Stephen Spencer, Paul Geoffrey Spencer, Scott Rosser Dario G featuring Vanessa Quinones 5:19
5."8 Ball"Rick Smith, Karl Hyde, Darren Emerson Underworld 8:51
6."Spinning Away" (originally performed by Brian Eno and John Cale) Brian Eno, John Cale Sugar Ray 4:24
7."Return of Django" (originally performed by The Upsetters) Lee "Scratch" Perry Asian Dub Foundation featuring Harry Beckett and Simon de Souza 4:17
8."On Your Own" (Crouch End Broadway mix) Damon Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James, Dave Rowntree Blur 3:32
9."Yé ké yé ké" (Hardfloor edit) Mory Kante Mory Kante 3:55
10."Woozy" Sister Bliss, Maxi Jazz, Rollo Armstrong Faithless 7:53
11."Richard, It's Business as Usual" Barry Adamson Barry Adamson 4:17
12."Brutal" Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris, Gillian Gilbert New Order 4:49
13."Lonely Soul" (from Psyence Fiction , 1998) Richard Ashcroft, Wil Malone, DJ Shadow Unkle featuring Richard Ashcroft 8:53
14."Beached" Angelo Badalamenti Orbital and Angelo Badalamenti 6:45
Total length:76:53

Year-end charts

Chart (2000)Position
Canadian Albums (Nielsen SoundScan) [8] 145

Certifications

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA) [9] Gold35,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ) [10] Gold7,500^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Release

Box office

The film opened in February 11, 2000, in both the United Kingdom and the United States. [11] The film opened at number 2 at the box office in both countries, with a weekend gross of $15,277,921 in the United States and Canada behind Scream 3 , and a gross of £2,418,321 ($3.9 million) in the United Kingdom and Ireland behind Toy Story 2 . [11]

The following weekend it opened in eight other countries (Austria, Belgium, Brazil, France, Germany, Puerto Rico, South Africa and Switzerland) opening at number one in all of them with a gross of $4.9 million in its first five days in France and $2.3 million in its opening four-day weekend in Germany. [12]

Global takings totaled over US$144 million, of which US$39 million was from the United States and Canada and $19 million from the United Kingdom. [13] [14] The budget of the film was US$50 million.

Home media

The film has been released on VHS and DVD. It was released on Blu-ray in Spain in October 2022 . [15] The standard DVD release included nine scenes that were deleted from the film, including an alternative opening which to an extent resembles the one in the novel. These were later included in a Special Edition DVD release, along with Danny Boyle's commentary on what might have been their purpose. There is also an alternative ending which depicts Sal committing suicide and everyone loading up on a boat from the raft.

Reception

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 20% based on 119 reviews, and an average rating of 4.4/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "The Beach is unfocused and muddled, a shallow adaptation of the novel it is based on. Points go to the gorgeous cinematography, though." [16] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 43 out of 100, based on 34 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [17]

Critics suggested that DiCaprio's fame post- Titanic might have contributed to the financial success of this film, which came out less than three years after the James Cameron blockbuster. CNN's Paul Clinton said "Leonardo DiCaprio's main fan base of screaming adolescent girls won't be disappointed with The Beach. The majority of the film displays the titanic-sized young heartthrob sans his shirt in this story about the pseudo-angst and alienation of a young man from the United States escaping civilization and his computer-obsessed generation." He agreed with most others that The Beach was "nothing to write home about".

Accolades

DiCaprio was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actor for his work on the film.

Controversies

Damage to filming location

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 Le 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. [18] Following shooting of the film, there was a clear flat area at one end of the beach that was created artificially with an odd layout of trees which was never rectified, and the entire area remained damaged from the original state until the tsunami of 2004. [19]

The lawsuits dragged on for years. In 2006, Thailand's Supreme Court upheld an appellate 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. [20]

The large increase in tourist traffic to the beach as a result of the film resulted in environmental damage to the bay and the nearby coral reefs, prompting Thai authorities to close the beach in 2018. [21]

The restoration period for the bay was lengthened due to travel restrictions during the COVID pandemic. Blacktip sharks began breeding there again. In 2022, the bay reopened to tourists, under strict protocols of no boats, no swimming and no more than a one-hour visit per person for a limited number of visitors at a time. [22]

Portrayal of Thailand

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 drug culture was said to give Thailand a bad image and having a statue of Buddha in a bar was cited as "blasphemous". [23]

Possible spin-off

In a 2019 interview with The Independent , Danny Boyle revealed that a television series based on his film has been written by Amy Seimetz. The proposed series is set to take place before the events from the 1996 novel, although it will be updated to occur 20 years later, in 2016. [24]

See also

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