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On the Beach

  • TV Movie
  • 2000
  • 3h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Armand Assante, Bryan Brown, and Rachel Ward in On the Beach (2000)
TragedyDramaSci-Fi

After a global nuclear war, the residents of Australia must come to terms with the fact that all life will be destroyed in a matter of months.After a global nuclear war, the residents of Australia must come to terms with the fact that all life will be destroyed in a matter of months.After a global nuclear war, the residents of Australia must come to terms with the fact that all life will be destroyed in a matter of months.

  • Director
    • Russell Mulcahy
  • Writers
    • Nevil Shute
    • John Paxton
    • David Williamson
  • Stars
    • Armand Assante
    • Rachel Ward
    • Bryan Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    4.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Russell Mulcahy
    • Writers
      • Nevil Shute
      • John Paxton
      • David Williamson
    • Stars
      • Armand Assante
      • Rachel Ward
      • Bryan Brown
    • 109User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 7 nominations total

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    Top cast72

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    Armand Assante
    Armand Assante
    • Cmdr. Dwight Towers
    Rachel Ward
    Rachel Ward
    • Moira Davidson
    Bryan Brown
    Bryan Brown
    • Dr. Julian Osborne
    Jacqueline McKenzie
    Jacqueline McKenzie
    • Mary Davidson Holmes
    Grant Bowler
    Grant Bowler
    • Lt. Peter Holmes
    Allison Webber
    • Jenny Holmes
    Tieghan Webber
    • Jenny Holmes
    Steve Bastoni
    Steve Bastoni
    • First Officer Neil Hirsch
    David Ross Paterson
    David Ross Paterson
    • Chief Wawrzeniak
    • (as David Paterson)
    Kevin Copeland
    • Sonarman Bobby Swain
    Todd MacDonald
    Todd MacDonald
    • Radioman Giles
    Joe Petruzzi
    Joe Petruzzi
    • Lt. Tony Garcia
    Craig Beamer
    • Crewman Reid
    Jonathan Oldham
    • Crewman Parsons
    Trent Huen
    • Crewman Samuel Huynh
    Donni Frizzell
    • Crewman Rossi
    Jonathan Stuart
    • Crewman Burns
    Sam Loy
    • Seaman Sulman
    • Director
      • Russell Mulcahy
    • Writers
      • Nevil Shute
      • John Paxton
      • David Williamson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews109

    6.94.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8mstomaso

    Too real to be science fiction?

    Even writing the most basic mention of On the Beach's plot involves spoilers, so I've checked the spoiler radio button and will proceed to discuss the film with minimal reservation. I won't give away the ending, however.

    On the Beach is based on the mid-20th century novel of the same name by Neville Shute, and offers a more elaborate and engrossing treatment of its subject than the original classic film (1959) starring Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner and Fred Astaire. This Showtime original is an hour longer than its predecessor, and will likely bore some of the more impatient members of its audience. Unlike most contemporary sci-fi, this is no action film, but a sombre, depressing, examination of the self-destruction of the human race through nuclear war.

    Never over-the-top, alarmist, or politically biased, On the Beach simply presents the stark reality of its premise, and uses finely developed characters to give context, shape and meaning, to the experience. the cast is easily equal to its predecessor, with Armand Assante and Rachel Ward particularly illuminating their roles.

    Assante plays an American nuclear submarine commander who has outrun the nuclear fall out and managed to surface near Australia, as that continent prepares to experience the first effects of the radiation now permeating earth's atmosphere. All around, people are preparing to die. The most sought after commodity is a do-it-yourself family suicide kit. Immediately enlisted by the Australian government to carry out a top-secret mission to investigate an IP signal coming from Anchorage Alaska, Assante is assigned an Australian military liaison (Grant Bowler) and a scientist (Bryan Brown)and asked to turn his boat around in search of humanity's last hope. In his few days on land before this fateful journey, Assante befriends his liaison's family, developing a special affinity for his sister-in-law, the playful Rachel Ward.

    My plot summary takes us about 1/3rd of the way through the story, but sets up all the major elements of On the Beach.

    Why does this film work so well? The cinematography is good, but not excellent. The direction is excellent and the cast is exceptionally good. But more than anything else, On the Beach makes its point because the script and story are deeply humanized by the complex and bold characterizations. The characters have interesting back-stories and deal with their harrowing predicament in very different ways. You not only feel as if you know these people, but you like them and sympathize with them - even the more despicable characters.

    This is a great piece of classic science fiction, recommended to all, but those with a limited attention span should opt for the 1959 version instead.
    9cpto

    Excellent, but probably the most depressing movie I've ever seen!

    Nightmares are very personal things. Probably because I was in the military at a time when nuclear war seemed more probable than it does now I occasionally had nightmares involving nuclear weapons - the end of all things I hold dear. Regardless of what that says about me, it is a problem that has not been resolved with the end of the Cold War.

    I had read some negative reviews about Showtime's remake of the classic picture, so I wasn't sure it was worth watching. That was a mistake as large as the one that frames "On the Beach." This version far surpasses the original in presentation, depth of character, and, of course, effects.

    Quite simply, "On the Beach" is the story of the crew of the last surviving American submarine, an Australian Naval officer, and that officer's wife and friends. A nuclear holocaust has created a cloud of radioactive dust that destroyed all life in the Northern hemisphere and is gradually making its way south. Worse, the Australian survivors have a good idea of when the radioactivity will arrive and kill them. When it does, humanity, and presumably most other life, will vanish from the planet. We may as well not have existed.

    I've felt up until now that the 1959 classic with Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner was the most depressing film ever made. However, director Russell Mulcahy and an excellent cast including Armande Assante, Rachel Ward, and Grant Bowler make the 1959 version seem stilted and pale by comparison. This remake - perhaps reinterpretation is a better word - gives the characters a depth that now seems missing in the original film. Commander Towers displays an increasing disorientation as the film progresses. Moira has more to her character than that of a lush. And Lt. Holmes is clearly not happy about the time spent away from his wife who, in this version, better illuminates her increasing disconnection from the real world.

    Still, I find one thing missing from both films. Dylan Thomas exhorted us not to go gently into that good night. Yet Australians and Americans - at least those in Alaska - seem to have no trouble taking suicide pills (with injections for pets and children - seems like it should have been the other way around.) There is a great ethical issue in taking the pills and injections that is not explored in either version, and yet what deserves more ethical and moral debate than whether it is human, in the best sense of the term, to slip silently and uncomplainingly from life? Aside from the insanity of humanity eliminating all higher life on the planet, this lack of exploration of ethical issues is the point that most bothered me about "On the Beach."

    I've not read the book so I can't comment on which picture is closer to it. I will say that I think the ending of the newer version seemed at odds with Towers' character - perhaps it was merely a fantasy of Moira while she was dying, or perhaps a critical scene was deleted for timing. I hope it was not just the tendency of modern film makers to sweeten the ending! The earlier movie is much more consistent with Dwight Power's character.

    So. This is a movie well worth three hours of your life. Aside from occasional histrionics from Julian Osborne in both versions, it presents people going about their lives as best they can. You are left to decide the meaning behind it, as we always are as individuals. There are no simple answers here, and even the questions the movie raises aren't simple.

    The movie will leave you depressed. That shows you're thinking. Perhaps there's no solution to the conundrum of stellar forces, chemicals, and biologics available as weapons. Some serious thinkers have postulated that the reason we don't receive any radio signals from others in the galaxy is that civilizations reach a certain level, and then, when they have learned to unleash powers far above what evolution trained them to comprehend, destroy themselves.

    It's a serious thought and a serious movie. I recommend it highly. A solid 9+ from me.
    marko-f

    Shocking. This movie lets you realise that the end of mankind is not unthinkable...

    What would I do when I was confronted with my certain death and the end of mankind? That question was getting more and more to me when I watched On The Beach. Very confronting and on the eve of a war in Iraq, not at all unthinkable.

    The plot is simple: War has broke out (in this case between the US and China, but it could be Iraq or North-Korea too...) and the US strikes with nuclear weapons. Australia gets spared initially, but its inhabitants face certain death as clouds of radio active fall-out nears. Within two months, no one human will be alive. Unless... There is a chance that some people close to the north pole survived. An American nuclear submarine that survived the war is boarded by an Aussie liaison officer and a cynical scientist, that used to date the sister-in-law of the officer, to search for possible survivors.

    Not much action, but for those who like to think while watching a movie, this film will stick to you. There are story lines that resemble soap opera's. That might be true on the surface, but it is completely different when you keep in mind that they all are going to die. You feel the difficulties in the way the characters choose to die.

    The movie is played well, directed well and has great photography. The director uses several filming techniques that are rarely used so that the viewer gets time to think about the situation and feel the dilemma of the character.

    Unless you cannot bear to be confronted with your own mortality, this is a must-see.
    spacefan

    Two Words: Depressing and Haunting

    I found this movie depressing as hell. But I also found it haunting. I thought the acting and direction were really superb. And, by the way, I saw the original with Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner. If anyone thinks a remake can't approach the original in style and quality, you will change your mind when you see THIS remake. The other thought that you will mull over in your mind, as with the original, is how human beings could be so monumentally stupid as to allow this to happen. I came away from this movie with the same sensation I had after I saw the movie The Day After. Other than a few references to the nuclear war that got the cast of characters into this dilemma, the movie did not dwell on nuclear war--only the aftermath. The aftermath of such folly is what the movie DID dwell on and how a species, namely homo sapiens, become extinct. What stands out in this movie is HOW they die. Each character or couple ending their lives in their own way and on their own terms. This movie remake is a must see...
    7esarge

    First half bad, ending really good

    I saw this movie across two nights on television.

    I found that the first half dragged quite a bit with too much time spent on setting up the love triangle.

    However, I found the ending really affecting and quite emotional. To put not too fine a point on it I was a little sleepless last night thinking about it. The acting in the ending is really quite good.

    I also think that for its interesting premise - what would happen to society in its possible final dies - this film doesn't go into much detail. I would have thought that there would be lots of interesting things to would happen.

    I think the stand out actors here are Jacqueline McKenzie (Mary Holmes) and Bryan Brown (Julian Osborne). They conveyed the emotion of their characters very well. I was quite disappointed with Armand Assante (Dwight Towers) as he didn't seem to have much of an emotional range.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Rachel Ward and Bryan Brown are husband and wife in real life. This marks their fourth on-screen collaboration.
    • Goofs
      When they walk around in protective suits in Anchorage, their only concern is their limited air supply. Suits do not protect from gamma rays; they only stop getting yourself contaminated with radiation-emitting particles. Thus the time being exposed to radiation should be more critical than air supply.
    • Quotes

      Cmdr. Dwight Towers: I carried warheads on my boat. That is correct. I was damn proud of it too. I served my country the best way I know how. And the only question I ask myself these days and I'm asking it every single millisecond now whatever the hell's left of what I've got, if where was I, where were you? Where were any of us? 'Cause I don't know what the hell two insane nations were doing facing each other down all those years. All that had to be done was that the brains, you know, the rational minds, the so-called best, you know all they had to do was just come, just come, come to the tables, negotiate, break a little bread. Do you know we had a combined arsenal of sixty-five thousand nuclear warheads. I have failed to find the logic in that. No logic.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 58th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2001 (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Into My Arms
      Written by Nick Cave

      Performed by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 2009 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Australia
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • USS Charleston
    • Filming locations
      • Sorrento, Victoria, Australia(Beach house and beach)
    • Production companies
      • Coote Hayes Productions
      • Edwards/Sullivan Productions
      • Showtime Networks
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $10,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 3h 15m(195 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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