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L'île au trésor

Original title: Treasure Island
  • 1999
  • PG-13
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
688
YOUR RATING
L'île au trésor (1999)
An adaptation of the Robert Lewis Stevenson adventure classic, in which a young boy sets off on a voyage armed with a map to buried treasure.
Play trailer1:36
1 Video
12 Photos
SwashbucklerAdventureFamily

An adaptation of the Robert Lewis Stevenson adventure classic, in which a young boy sets off on a voyage armed with a map to buried treasure.An adaptation of the Robert Lewis Stevenson adventure classic, in which a young boy sets off on a voyage armed with a map to buried treasure.An adaptation of the Robert Lewis Stevenson adventure classic, in which a young boy sets off on a voyage armed with a map to buried treasure.

  • Director
    • Peter Rowe
  • Writers
    • Peter Rowe
    • Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Stars
    • Sarah Holland
    • Pax Lohan
    • Anthony Booth
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    688
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Rowe
    • Writers
      • Peter Rowe
      • Robert Louis Stevenson
    • Stars
      • Sarah Holland
      • Pax Lohan
      • Anthony Booth
    • 24User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:36
    Trailer

    Photos11

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    Top cast21

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    Sarah Holland
    • The Strumpet
    Pax Lohan
    • Gran
    Anthony Booth
    Anthony Booth
    • Chief Revenue Officer
    Christopher Benjamin
    Christopher Benjamin
    • Squire Trelawney
    Malcolm Stoddard
    Malcolm Stoddard
    • Captain Smollet
    David Robb
    David Robb
    • Doctor Livesey
    Kevin Zegers
    Kevin Zegers
    • Jim Hawkins
    Jake Fry
    • Morgan
    Dermot Keaney
    Dermot Keaney
    • Israel Hands
    Cody Palance
    • Blind Pew
    Philip Whitchurch
    Philip Whitchurch
    • Black Dog
    • (as Phillip Whitchurch)
    Al Ashton
    • George Merry
    • (as Al Hunter Ashton)
    Walter Sparrow
    Walter Sparrow
    • Ben Gunn
    Patrick Bergin
    Patrick Bergin
    • Billy Bones
    Jack Palance
    Jack Palance
    • Long John Silver
    Jaffa
    • 'Captain Flint'
    Peter Rowe
    Peter Rowe
    • Captain Flint
    Daphne Williams
    • Molly
    • Director
      • Peter Rowe
    • Writers
      • Peter Rowe
      • Robert Louis Stevenson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    5.2688
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    Featured reviews

    2germancards

    Obviously a different treasure island to the one I was thinking of.

    The titles say the film is "based on" the novel by R. L. Stevenson. That seems to mean they chose the same names for the characters. As the film progresses, the plot diverges more and more from the novel. The end is completely different and gave me the impression the budget ran out and they had to kill the cast off and finish the film as quickly as possible rather than stick to the story. I watched them making the film on the Isle of Man and bought the DVD to see what they had produced. I can't think of any other reason to buy it.
    3TheLittleSongbird

    The most bizarre Treasure Island adaptation, as well as the worst

    That the story is such a classic and that it had Jack Palance in it were two reasons enough to give this much-maligned adaptation a try. Unfortunately, this adaptation of Treasure Island just doesn't work at all and by far the worst version, to me the only really bad one as well. It's a disaster as an adaptation, and judging it on its own terms(which this reviewer considers a fairer approach and always tries to use it) there's little to praise it either. The locations are beautiful indeed if not always tropical enough, the Hispagnola is fantastically rendered and the adaptation is well shot, the start is quite strong and there are a few good performances with Kevin Zegers' appealing Jim Hawkins, Walter Sparrow's humorous Ben Gunn and Patrick Bergin's gusty Billy Bones. Jack Palance is the big name here, he certainly tries his best as Silver and looks the part in a role that on paper he was perfect for but he deserved much better scripting and direction than what he got. Because what we got was a waste of a great actor's talents, there are numerous points where Palance is very charismatic and engaging but when the scripting is particularly poor there is the sense that Palance knew it was poor and gives up. The rest of the acting shows little enthusiasm either, in fact most of the cast go through the motions.

    Characterisation is incredibly weak here and not really in the bland sort of way but in the grossly distorted sort of way, where we have the least frightening Blind Pew imaginable and interesting characters like Squire Trelawney now one-sided caricatures, and the less said about the good guys now bad thing the better. What was really disappointing was the lack of development in Silver and Jim's relationship, crucial to the story and very interesting and potentially poignant but hardly seen. And you know something's wrong when you can't really tell whether Silver is good or bad, no other adaptation of Treasure Island has had that problem. But other than the bizarre treatment of the story and characters the main problem with this Treasure Island adaptation was how lazy it felt. The script is one corny muddle with some parts only feeling like padding which only succeeds in slowing down the pacing, and the story is plodding and completely lacking in adventurous spark, intensity and mystery that would have been there if just a little if the stockade assault had not been left out.

    When it comes to the changes, changes to a story is not a problem but it can be if the changes are basically useless and drag the adaptation down and that was exactly the case with this Treasure Island. It also depends on the nature of the changes and here it just felt bizarre in a way that you don't want to witness again. The adaptation is hurt even further by too much focus on Black Dog, a secondary character originally and it feels like it, an incredibly rushed and anti-climatic final battle and a very tacked-on and toe-curlingly cheesy ending that leaves a sour taste in the mouth. All in all, lazy and uncomfortably weird, a very bad version(even on its own terms) and not worth bothering with unless you are a fan of Palance or one dead-set on seeing every Treasure Island adaptation available. 3/10 Bethany Cox
    8choco_aslan

    Sparkling new version of an old classic

    Jack Palance is magnificent as Long John Silver in this sparkling new adaptation of an old classic. Packed with a stellar cast of great British character actors and three Hollywood stars, it must rank among the top 5 versions ever made of Robert Louis Stevenson's legendary novel. Shame there's only one sexy female, but at least she was well cast - Sarah Holland played the saucy strumpet with a charm, power and sincerity that made me wish we'd seen more of her. It's true that the Isle of Man location left a lot to be desired, but it was fresh, different and added a surprise zing to the action. All in all, a cracking film worthy of more than a passing nod.
    heresjay

    worst adaptation ever

    This two-hour commercial from the Isle of Man Tourist Bureau bears only a superficial resemblance to the Stevenson novel. At the end, all the wrong people are dead and you half expect the strumpet from the first half of the show to make one final appearance. The Isle of Man provides all the locations, even masquerading (poorly) as the tropics. Nevertheless a few good performances emerge from this hacked-up classic. Kevin Zegers gives us at least as good a Hawkins as Bobby Driscoll. The venerable Walter Sparrow shines as Ben Gunn. And Jack Palance rasps out an engaging Silver but it's disappointing to see his name spelt wrong in the credits. Palance fans might like to see him tackle one of literature's most famous old coots, but Stevenson fans should leave this one alone.
    6Bezenby

    Jack play John, someone else plays Jack

    Ain't Treasure Island the best story ever about a bunch of adults trying to kill a child? This is a version from the nineties that I picked up for seven pence, with Jack Palance as Long John Silver. I'm still holding out for a copy of that Italian one set in space, because there's no way that can't not be not good.

    You know the story: Some fud called Jack works in a doss house in Cornwall while his mum lies in bed claiming Employment Support Allowance. One day this tosser turns up and gets wasted and tells Jack to watch out for a guy with one leg (whom I'd imagine is also claiming some sort of disability benefit). Then this blind guy turns up (more disability benefit) and curses the other guy. Before you know it loads of guys turns up and try and kill everyone and Jack ends up with a map and so on and so forth.

    After nearly being killed several times by various pirates, Jack ends up on a ship with a small crew of English gentleman and a much larger crew of obvious pirates who are definitely not just waiting to kill the gentry and get a hold of that map. Jack Palance shows up as definitely not the leader of the pirates and they all head of for some island.

    Following some man on man love action that was cut from most versions of this film (they are at see for months you know and no one likes to be alone), they all finally get to the island so they can start killing each other. By this time Jack's run off and met this arsehole called Ben Gunn, Silver's got his pirates up against the gentry, and there's a battle on the beach where only a few live to travel the sea once more. The End.

    What you'll notice first is that the island is this version of treasure island is a bit…Nothern European. I had it pegged as Ireland but it turns out to be the Isle of Man (you know, that island where everyone has three legs). You'll also notice that they didn't bother doing anything with Bristol and just used the city as it looks today (including the hookers). This story can't be ruined so it's a fair bet you'll enjoy this one.

    Now go away, I'm overdue my injection of smack. (The preceding is a transcription of the 1996 episode of FILM '99 with Barry Norman)

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Jack Palance's last theatrical film.
    • Goofs
      During his conversation with the doctor, just before they go to see Squire Trelawney with the map, a long piece of hay (at around 22 mins) disappears (at around 28 mins) then reappears (at around 38 mins) from Jim Hawkin's left shoulder.
    • Quotes

      Long John Silver: [Jim is being tattooed] Och, that's a fine tattoo, Jim. It's a sign you're now truly a gentleman of fortune like the rest of us, eh?

      Jim Hawkins: Gentleman of fortune? Doesn't that mean a pirate?

      Long John Silver: Ah, pirate, Jim... now the word's a tricky one. For instance, here, who'd be the pirates? The men who worked their way across this treasure cruise and simply wanted their... their fair share of it or men like the Squire and the Captain who stole a treasure chart from a lad who was given it and then betrayed him out of his share of it? Now mayn't they be the ones that should be called pirates?

    • Crazy credits
      Post Production Dog .... Shakespeare (at 01:33:05)
    • Connections
      Version of Treasure Island (1912)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Treasure Island?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 8, 1999 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • L'ile au trésor
    • Filming locations
      • Castletown, Isle of Man
    • Production companies
      • Contre Films
      • Fries Film Group
      • Isle of Man Film Commission
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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