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Movie: "On The Beach" Stanley Kramer, Gregory Peck

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Movie: "On The Beach" Stanley Kramer, Gregory Peck

Unread postby dunewalker » Sat 28 Jan 2006, 15:45:01

We saw On The Beach last night, from Neville Shute's novel of the same name. It was set in Australia after global nuclear war in 1964. Interesting to see an oil-starved urban culture relying on bicycles, electric trains and horse-drawn carriages. In the face of the threat of global warfare focusing on the Iran tensions, the movie seems more relevant than ever. The story contrasts the reactions of various individuals to the inevitability of the future, from complete denial, to panic, to adaptations, resignation and acceptance of death.
"Wilderness is another civilization apart from our own." - H.D. Thoreau
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Re: "On The Beach"

Unread postby cynthia » Sat 28 Jan 2006, 22:41:24

Thanks for the tip. My honey and I are going to make some popcorn and watch it tonight!
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Re: "On The Beach"

Unread postby Heineken » Sat 28 Jan 2006, 22:56:40

It's an excellent flick, with great relevance to today. Four stars. Has a strangely beautiful, tragic tone that is maintained throughout. And what an ending.
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Re: "On The Beach"

Unread postby Tanada » Sun 29 Jan 2006, 19:09:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('woodcutter', 'W')e saw On The Beach last night, from Neville Shute's novel of the same name. It was set in Australia after global nuclear war in 1964. Interesting to see an oil-starved urban culture relying on bicycles, electric trains and horse-drawn carriages. In the face of the threat of global warfare focusing on the Iran tensions, the movie seems more relevant than ever. The story contrasts the reactions of various individuals to the inevitability of the future, from complete denial, to panic, to adaptations, resignation and acceptance of death.


Are you seriously claiming that a 42 year old anti-cold-war propaganda peice has any accuracy or relevence to the world we live in today? I hate to break this to you, but looking at anything the people in Hollywood make and thinking it has any bearing on reallity is to be charitible, naive in the extreame.

The job of Hollywood is to entertain, not inform. Never assume that anything they do has any information in it, look up the real scenario's by people who do realistic predictions and you will have a much better chance of figuring out what will really happen in a given set of circumstances. Ont The Beach is a fairly entertaining movie, very well acted and with a gripping dramatic story line, but it has no more reallity in it than The Day After Tommorrow or Jurassic Park!
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To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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Re: "On The Beach"

Unread postby crapattack » Sun 29 Jan 2006, 20:05:13

Of course "On the Beach" is relevant Tanada. Are you 100% sure that we aren't facing a nuclear war in the future? Are you 100% sure that given the cluster threats of climate change, water depletion, oil peak, population growth and pandemic, we aren't facing the most serious threat to human survival we've ever faced? Because if you are 100% sure we aren't you're a zealot, because only a zealot could be that sure. Most rational people would admit some probablity and if there is some chance, than sure, of course the film is relevant.
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Re: "On The Beach"

Unread postby Heineken » Sun 29 Jan 2006, 23:02:04

We've already come perilously close to an "On the Beach" scenario several times in our history. So to dismiss the film as irrelevant to today, or to any era still marked by the presence of thousands of nuclear warheads, is a strange attitude indeed. Perhaps what Tanada is really expressing is an inability to accept the prospects depicted so realistically in the film. That I can understand.
"Actually, humans died out long ago."
---Abused, abandoned hunting dog

"Things have entered a stage where the only change that is possible is for things to get worse."
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Re: 'On The Beach' Stanley Kramer, Gregory Peck

Unread postby crapattack » Tue 31 Jan 2006, 05:48:38

I'm actually really surprised no one in Hollywood hasn't done a "Day After Tomorrow" type treatment with Peak Oil.

Heineken you're right. The reality of the movie was too close to home, denial is a perfectly valid option when you're not able to face the naked truth.
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