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The Beach (2000)
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An internationally famous young star, a story rife with
dramatic possibilities, and a natural setting that appears fit for only gods to inhabit
The Beach has all of these assets, and it squanders them one by one like a
salesman drinking on the companys dime. Director Danny Boyle and screenwriter John
Hodge (working from Alex Garlands novel of the same name) have concocted an epic for
pipsqueaks, a fairy tale for people who already believe in fairies.
Richard (Leonardo DiCaprio) is a disaffected 20-something whos
traveling through Thailand. In a lazily written voiceover narration, Richard tells us that
hes in search of experience, something intense enough to sweep away the cobwebs that
come from living in a cushy high-tech society. His chance comes when a strung-out man in
his hotel (Robert Carlyle, in a small part) tells him of a secret island paradise located
in the Gulf of Siam, and gives him a map showing the way there. Richard convinces two
other hotel guests a lovely French tourist whom hes smitten with (Virginie
Ledoyen) and her boyfriend to join him. The trio makes its way to the island, where
they find a land thats straight out of a Cheech and Chong hash dream: a marijuana
field that covers the acreage of a midsize airport, a lake thats hidden to the
outside world by a ring of jagged mountains, and a group of amiable misfits who live along
its beautiful beach. The people refer to their colony as "the Beach," and their
leader is a strong-willed pragmatist known as Sal (Tilda Swinton).
You know its not your normal secret society when Richard and his
friends are accepted almost instantly into the clan. The film becomes a summer idyll, as
Richard kills a shark, finds himself being seduced by the Beachs most desirable
women, and takes daily dips in the lake. But as in all dystopic fables, the good times
come crashing down. Instead of unraveling due to an organic clash of personalities or
philosophies as, say, an Aldous Huxley might have had it, the Beach falls apart when the
outside world intrudes thanks to a wholly unmotivated action on Richards part. The
second half of this movie is a real drag, consisting mostly of Richards exile to a
little scenic overlook, where he descends to a state of primal being. ("Primal"
being a relative term here: mostly he skulks around the brush wearing a headband, in one
of the movies many blasphemous allusions to Apocalypse Now.) Unsurprisingly, Leos status as the
worlds leading box-office draw helps to snap Richard back to reality by the end.
The fun of taking in stories about imaginary societies, whether
its Lost Horizon or 1984, lies in the detailing given to the fictional
worlds values and customs, and what they reflect about our own reality. But what is
this Shangri-la that Leo has stumbled into? In this case, Paradise means that a walk-on
player has to cook your dinner while you play volleyball on the beach. We arent ever
given any meaningful information about the Beachs underlying philosophy; we
arent even told whether it stands for anything beyond its own self-preservation.
Nobody ever comments on the sad fact that the Beachs inhabitants are still hamstrung
by all of societys sexual hang-ups. (The women all keep their tops on in this island
paradise, there isnt a gay couple in sight, and Sals boyfriend is so
threatened by Richards presence that he crushes the newcomers testicles with
his beefy fist.) Is time still a concept on the Beach? How do these people resolve serious
disputes? Didnt any of them ever want to have a kid, and how was the idea greeted
when they brought it up?
Its even hard to see what the attraction of the Beach is beyond
its setting. The inhabitants, far from being the rootless visionaries and adventurers
youd expect to find in such a place, seem flaccid and superannuated, like the kind
of people who keep hanging out on their college campus years after theyve graduated.
(They dont even have interesting faces.) Theyre so intellectually barren, and
such a bust in their relationships, that when Sal tells them, "We have so much here
to inspire us," your eyes wander around the screen to see what it is shes
talking about. Could she mean the bamboo tool shed? And at the end, after everything has
fallen apart, theres no sense of loss, no feeling that a noble experiment has
failed. Its just time to go back to the mainland.
This feeling that nothing of any real importance is at stake
permeates every corner of the movie. Danny Boyle, in particular, has not covered
himself in glory. With Shallow Grave and Trainspotting,
he wrestled away the title of "Looking Good But Going Nowhere" from such
formidable opponents as Sam Raimi and David Fincher. In The Beach his style is
downright schizophrenic, a jarring back-and-forth between conventional directing and
post-modern whimsy, and in the end nothing works. Boyle doesnt know how to build
emotion in what are supposed to be the storys big moments, his action scenes lack
snap and clarity, and his idea of a love scene is a slow-motion striptease set amongst a
field of luminous plankton. Meanwhile, he coughs up a steady stream of tony camera angles
and arty effects, such as turning Richards run through the jungle into a video game,
that shatter what little atmosphere hes managed to cobble together.
More important is Leonardo DiCaprios apparent decision to retire
from acting. He was simply phenomenal in Whats Eating Gilbert Grape?
and This Boys Life; raw and instinctual, he was the
greatest young actor wed seen in years. But here, in his first starring role since Titanic, he looks like hes been devoured by his
heartthrob status. He has the same self-aware look in his eye whether hes being
harassed by peddlers on a Bangkok street or collapsing on the sand after a taxing swim.
Hes a bag of jokey tics and poses, and his tics are the focus of every scene. The
Beach doesnt deserve anyones best effort, but how does DiCaprio expect to
maintain the respect of anyone besides teenyboppers if he keeps this up? Hes all of
25 years old, and he already looks like hes thrown in the towel.
- Tom Block