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LA Weekly - February 11- 17, 2000 DiCaprio finds trouble in
paradise by John Patterson Danny Boyle´s adaption of Alex
Garland´s novel "The Beach" is borne into theaters on a tidal wave of impossibly
heightened expectations. It has to please at least three distinct moviegoing
constituences - fans of Leonardo DiCaprio, of Boyle´s "Trainspotting" and of
Garland - whose members would probably not much enjoy being trapped together on
the same busted elevator. Garland´s novel about Gen-X backpackers
and their nightmares in a Thai island paradise is simplistic, shallow and very
entertaining (it has its own cadre of wall-eyed adherents), and on paper should
make a perfect fit with the team that made "Trainspotting". The novel
synthesized elements of Joseph Conrad filtered through "Apocalypse Now", a
soupcon of defanged J.G.Ballard, and the Graham Greene on "The Quiet American"
and "A Burnt-Out Case" - all coated with a patina of video-game and Nam-movie
motifs to make a "Lord of the Flies"-cum-"Deliverance" for the Nintendo
generation. From all this Boyle has crafted an
intermittently gripping, good-looking movie. But will this grim recipe please
DiCaprio´s female fans? The potential rise of rabid bobbysoxer demographic was
one reason DiCaprio was nervous about doing "Titanic". Ironically, that sector
of the audience is the one that will probably end up underwriting "The Beach"s
success - even as one suspects that the film was specifically designed to thin
out the Leo fan herd by alienating the entire subscription base of "Seventeen"
magazine. (This might have been more efficiently achieved had DiCaprio taken the
lead in "American Psycho", to which he was briefly attached.) "The Beach" comes
on all spiky and harsh, yet it ends up revealing not our darkest selves, but a
sticky, soft center. Then there´s the group that believes
DiCaprio was a great actor long before he came under the lash of James ("Call me
Ahab") Cameron. And so he was: In "This Boy´s Life, Robert De Niro was roundly
bulldozed off the screen by the 18-year-old tyke, and DiCaprio´s mentally
handicapped younger brother in "What´s Eating Gilbert Grape" is a miracle of
controlled sympathy. This group sees "Titanic" as an aberration, and is hoping
that "The Beach" will mark the return of the real Leo. The filmmakers have their fans, too,
with their own expectations. Boyle, his screenwriter John Hodge and producer
Andrew MacDonald are looking to redeem their profile after the witless farrago
that was "A Life Less Ordinary". Along with other mid-90´s pop-culture landmarks
like "Pulp Fiction" and "Scream", "Trainspotting" looks distinctly ropy now, all
slick surfaces, bold primaries and lashing of shock- horror- in- yer- faceness.
"Shallow Grave", meanwhile, was shallow and certainly not grave. Both
"Trainspotting" and "Shallow Grave" disintegrate like damp Kleenex on a third
viewing. We meet DiCaprio´s jaded solo
traveller, Richard (no last name, and from "nowhere"), in Bangkok as he looks
for ways to escape the well-trodden backpackers routes, now clogged with junkie
tourists and "Western parastes" busy strip-mining the fleshpots of the Orient
for their own pleasure. In a flyblown hostel he encounters a messianic tramp
named Daffy Duck (Robert Carlyle), who gives him a map to Paradise - and
undiscovered island with a perfect concealed beach. Richard hooks up with a
French couple, Etienne and Francoise (Guillaume Canet and Virginie Ledoyen).
Together they trek to the island, which is uneasily divided between an
idealistic multiracial European beach community overseen by den mother Tilda
Swinton, and a huge inland marijuana farm manned by piratical,
machine-gun-toting Thai growers. The two groups have reached a mutual
non-aggression pact that depends on no more people finding out about the
beach. Except that Richard has already copied
the map for a gang of no-brain stoners, and when he enters Paradises, his
"Diablo" T-shirt announces (rather too loudly) that he´ll soon turn it into
hell. His motives for being there are corrupt to begin with - he´s got the hots
for Francoise, and his only vocation is "the pursuit of pleasure" - and
suspicion attaches him because, alone among the beach´s transplanted Europeans,
he is American. (Changing Richard from English to American is the movie´s one
stroke of genius - it clarifies in an instant the novel´s rather unfocused
Coca-colonial subtext.) Sure enough, the stoners follow him, the compact with
the pot farmers is violated, and Richard becomes an outcast, at which point he
develops a Khe Sanh-style thousand-yard stare and starts to take instructions
from the ghost of Daffy. It´s only a matter of time before the
"Deerhunter"-Style Russian roulette games kick off. "The Beach" certainly looks beautiful,
but doesn´t bear too much close analysis: It´s certainly no brainier than
"Trainspotting", and not an inch deeper. The segue into Richard´s
rather-too-polite psychosis is glib and easy, as is the community´s slide into
collective solipsism and quasi-fascism. But at the center is DiCaprio´s
energizing performance, which lends the movie a definition and focus it would
otherwise lack. One awaits the day when he finds himself standing in the ruins
of his physical beauty, "Titanic" a distant memory, finally able to get on with
the serious business of being a damn good actor. "The Beach" will have to
suffice until then. * |