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The Beach Causes a stir around
the world!

Links to more Japanese Interviews Pictures:
Japan 1998 |
Japan
2000-2 || Japan
2000-3
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Leonardo DiCaprio's latest
movie, ``The Beach'' sank like the Titanic with U.S. moviegoers. Its
distributor, 20th Century Fox, isn't worried, though.
``The Beach''
is staying afloat in overseas markets, where it is expected to gross at
least twice its U.S. take, showing just how big a force international
theater circuits have become for Hollywood.
With the United States
saturated with new movie megaplexes, cinema companies are turning more
resources to construction of movie screens overseas, theater owners said
Monday at the opening of ShoWest, the industry's annual trade
show.
``We won't see a whole lot more growth in theaters in the
United States,'' said John Fithian, president of the National Association
of Theatre Owners. ``But the megaplexing of the world is just now getting
under way.''
The number of theater screens overseas is about four
times the 37,000 in the United States, but many foreign cinemas are
outdated and in need of the sort of makeover that has gone on among U.S.
theaters, with better sound, seating and other comforts, Fithian
said.
``The rest of the world is actually untouched at this
point,'' said Jerry Magner, chief financial officer for National
Amusements Inc. In the late 1980s, the Massachusetts-based theater chain
had no overseas cinemas, but nearly one-fourth of its 1,300 screens now
are in foreign countries.
Foreign theaters accounted for less than
a third of Hollywood's movie revenue 20 years ago. Today, overseas cinemas
make up about 55 percent of the industry's business, and that figure is
expected to rise as more modern theaters are built.
Certain films
that play better to foreign audiences, such as ``The Beach'' or MGM's
James Bond adventures, can do an even higher percentage of their business
overseas.
A dark, brooding tale of an American backpacker on a
quest for paradise in Thailand, ``The Beach'' failed to capture the
heartbreak crowd of young women who helped make DiCaprio's ``Titanic'' the
highest-grossing movie of all-time.
Released last month, the movie
has made an anemic $35 million domestically but already has surpassed that
in just a few European countries, including Britain and France.
The
movie's somber tone, foreign setting and international popularity of
director Danny Boyle, who made ``Trainspotting,'' probably gave it wider
appeal among non-American audiences.
Jim Gianopulos, president of
20th Century Fox International, said the studio expects ``The Beach'' to
do at least twice as much business overseas as in the United States. That
should ensure the studio will turn a profit on ``The Beach,'' which cost
about $50 million to make.
The growth of foreign movie markets is
evident from Fox's ``Star Wars'' movies. The first three films, from 1977,
1980 and 1983, did far better domestically than overseas.
The
latest, last year's ``Phantom Menace,'' grossed $431 million in the United
States but $60 million more than that internationally.
The same is
true for ``Titanic,'' which took in $600 million domestically and twice
that outside the United States.
``When you apply the sheer
magnitude of the market place beyond the U.S., you get this kind of
result,'' Gianopulos said. ``There are predictions out there over the next
decade of the international box office being two-thirds of the
market.''
Likely growth markets for theater developers include
Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia, notably China's untapped
audiences.
``It's just sitting there waiting for the taking,''
Peter Dobson of Warner International Theatres said at a panel discussion
Monday.
BANGKOK, March 11 (AFP) - Leonardo DiCaprio's hit
movie The Beach, which has been dogged by controversy in Thailand, enjoyed
a trouble-free opening night in Bangkok.
Movie-goers told AFP that
most major cinemas were crowded Friday night as the movie made its debut
as reports Saturday said protests from environmental activists had not
eventuated.
The movie's invite-only charity premiere Tuesday met
with a furious protest from enviromentalists who claim producers 20th
Century Fox had ruined a fragile eco-system while filming in Maya Bay on
Phi Phi island.
Fox denies any damage to Maya Bay, in southern
Thailand, while DiCaprio has defended the use of the island and a court
case alleging damage is still going on.
"The Beach screened
yesterday without expected protests from ecologists and
environmentalists," the Nation daily said.
The Beach based on the
cult novel by Alex Garland, rails against the destructive impact of heavy
tourism.
It tells the story of a traveller whose desire to get off
the beaten track leads him to a remote island inhabited by a community of
displaced Westerners intent on escaping the tourist throng.
"For
a while we were untouchable in our happiness"..
"I thought we'd have to talk about our positive energies a lot, kiss
the earth every morning and recycle our waste products by some unspeakable
mechanism. Fortunately not, it really was some kind of
paradise!"
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