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IMDbPro

A Day at the Beach

  • 1970
  • GP
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
522
YOUR RATING
A Day at the Beach (1970)
Drama

Bernie, a self-destructive alcoholic, is given watch over his niece Winnie. He tests the patience of the various people he knows and Winnie is often left on her own.Bernie, a self-destructive alcoholic, is given watch over his niece Winnie. He tests the patience of the various people he knows and Winnie is often left on her own.Bernie, a self-destructive alcoholic, is given watch over his niece Winnie. He tests the patience of the various people he knows and Winnie is often left on her own.

  • Director
    • Simon Hesera
  • Writers
    • Roman Polanski
    • Heere Heeresma
    • James Brockway
  • Stars
    • Mark Burns
    • Beatie Edney
    • Fiona Lewis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    522
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Simon Hesera
    • Writers
      • Roman Polanski
      • Heere Heeresma
      • James Brockway
    • Stars
      • Mark Burns
      • Beatie Edney
      • Fiona Lewis
    • 21User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos48

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Mark Burns
    Mark Burns
    • Bernie
    Beatie Edney
    Beatie Edney
    • Winnie
    • (as Beatrice Edney)
    Fiona Lewis
    Fiona Lewis
    • Melissa
    Maurice Roëves
    Maurice Roëves
    • Nicholas
    Jack MacGowran
    Jack MacGowran
    • Ticket Seller
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Stallholder
    • (as A. Queen)
    Graham Stark
    Graham Stark
    • Pipi
    Joanna Dunham
    • Tonie
    Eva Dahlbeck
    Eva Dahlbeck
    • Cafe Proprietress
    Thomas Heathcote
    Thomas Heathcote
    • Dice Player
    • (as Tom Heathcote)
    Jørgen Kiil
    • Carl
    Bertel Lauring
    • Louis
    • (as Bertil Lauring)
    Sisse Reingaard
    • Daughter of Cafe Proprietress
    • (as Sisse Reingärd)
    Lily Bacberg
    • Barmaid
    Benny Bundgaard
    • Delivery Man
    Lise Dietrich
    • Louis' Girlfriend
    June Eelli
    • Gypsy Woman
    Grith Fjeldmose
    • Passer-by
    • Director
      • Simon Hesera
    • Writers
      • Roman Polanski
      • Heere Heeresma
      • James Brockway
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    6.2522
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    Featured reviews

    7TheFearmakers

    On Foot Beach Road Movie

    Ironically, while Roman Polanski was in Europe the same year The Manson Family would violently crash Sharon Tate's party, he was preparing for two movies with the word DAY in the title: scouting to direct THE DAY OF THE DOLPHIN while adapting an obscure Dutch novel for A DAY AT THE BEACH, a film so independent it feels like something more of the John Cassavates wheelhouse...

    And this BEACH centers on a raving drunken British man's beeline trek through a mostly barren Danish beach tourist town during sporadic rain bursts, and instead of tourists are an abandoned lot of outdoor and indoor cafe or curio shop or liquor store or pub owners wherein he gets more intoxicated and thus more pontificating and moody along the way, mostly trying for as much drink for as little money possible: a kind of progressively-blasted human coupon...

    The primary twist is he's not alone... Tagging along is his niece who's really his daughter from surly starting point ex Fiona Lewis, and while future HIGHLANDER beauty Beatie Edney is a good enough child actress, providing both realistic screaming tantrums and gaping toothless grins whenever needed, her mere existence is to underline just how flaky, downright selfish and dangerously neglectful Mark Burns's Bernie's traipsing-around plight really is...

    For example, in one scene he's being hit-on by an openly gay/super effeminate storefront couple... one played capably by Peter Sellers billed as A. Queen; at the same time, right outside, little Winnie gets stuck in some netting along the beach's planked walkway... a path that winds through the sand in a location that's even more art-house from the incessant tempest...

    It's never entirely clear what the actual plot or purpose is, but Burns's character is a terrific drunk that'd make Charles Bukowski envy with a mobile, existential life all mapped out, at one point telling a pretentious (passed-out) poet's sexy wife, "I'll be hungover tomorrow, but the next day meet me at noon at..."

    As this lost-for-decades curio is, by the end, a dizzying odyssey by first time director Simon Hesera and, while frowned upon by writer/producer Polanski for lack of proper composition, it's through a rip-roaring drunkard's eyes that we're eyeing everything, so in actuality the location is more what the character experiences than the audience visualizes.
    9gpanderson

    alcoholic dad's day out with his little daughter . . .

    I saw this film at Pacific Cinematheque in Vancouver around 1994/95. The lead character is a pathetic drunk who takes his daughter for a day out. I believe it is set in a Danish seaside town. Certainly northern European of some sort. It is a series of episodes in a search for drinks, and the little girl ends up having to rescue her drunk dad. An allegory of life and the parent/ child relationship, perhaps. Peter Sellers is hilarious as a homosexual stall keeper. The atmosphere is relentlessly bleak, dark, ominous, and finally it rains. Could be depressing if the viewer has a family member similarly afflicted by alcoholism.

    Too bad it is not available. Would love to see it again.
    6twigbum99

    Polanski adaptation of a Danish book. Harrowing tale of an alcoholic & his small child out for the day by the beach.

    This was a dark piece indeed. The original story was a Danish book, I believe. The name of the author escapes me. The other comments are correct. It was a bleak look at alcoholism but hauntingly accurate. I loved the film. Painful to watch yet truthful. The little girl was amazing. Peter Sellars was great & his gay partner, whose name I've forgotten, was another great British comedian. Probably the best piece of trivia is that his wife, Sharon Tate, and others, were murdered in California while Polanski was in England editing the movie at Twickenhan Studios, after shooting insert shots there. Polanski left Twickenham Studios that night when he heard about the murders & never returned to finish the film. Had he done so, I am sure the film would have been released properly & been worthy of standing by his other work. I would love to see this film released on DVD.
    7GiraffeDoor

    I don't know about a winner, but it crosses the line.

    Special in many ways before you even start watching, this miniature is not desperate to be liked and is in fact rather admirable for its commitment to being unlovely.

    If you're wondering where they're going with this, then you may be disappointed; it is a snapshot of the miserable lives that play out in plain site when you truly don't care about anything but forgetting.

    Often painful but not quite excruciating, this vision of a man living a day as if it might truly be his last in freedom though he seems anything but free in practice.

    An exorcise in the pretentiousness of vulgar people always accompanied by a fairly agreeable child star.

    Polanski seems like he can do no wrong in his writing of this.
    9manuel-pestalozzi

    In my opinion a masterpiece

    As someone who usually does not like movies soliciting compassion for alcoholics or drug addicts I was surprised how much I liked A Day at the Beach. The title's promise is fulfilled in the best way possible. A young, intelligent alcoholic takes his little niece to a small seaport for a day. The man is most of the time looking for booze or ingesting it, occasionally rendering verbal outbursts which often sound very lucid. The girl is left to her own devices most of the time but fiercely loyal to her uncle.

    From the technical side the movie is virtually faultless. Foreground and background are always in very sharp focus, except for two brief episodes with POV shots of the very drunk main character. The drabness of the place (it is always raining or overcast) is occasionally contrasted by bright, vivid colors. It looks all very controlled and there can be no doubt that a true master is behind this picture. The cast is brilliant down to every secondary character. I found Peter Seller's contribution as a fairy unnecessary and superfluous, though.

    I watched the DVD release from Odeon Entertainment. There is an informative booklet about the movie, but Roman Polanski's involvement in the actual shooting is not clear. According to the booklet Polanski left the film while the final editing was in progress. Doesn't this mean that the effectively directed the movie? I would not be surprised if this were the case, in my opinion it very much looks like a Polanski movie. Its stunning how timeless his work is!

    A Day at the Beach would never have attracted a mass audience, and from the look of it (and the choice of actors) it probably was never meant to be a blockbuster. But everybody who can stand this difficult and rather depressing subject matter (men preferring drugs to other humans) this is a rewarding and aesthetically satisfying movie. It's great that they made it available on DVD.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lost for 20 years due to a "paperwork error" by Paramount Pictures. Was tracked down in 1992.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Unknown Peter Sellers (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Where Are We Going
      by Kenny Lynch and Mort Shuman

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    FAQ13

    • How long is A Day at the Beach?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 1970 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Un día en la playa
    • Filming locations
      • Copenhagen, Denmark(kinema weekly 26/4/69)
    • Production companies
      • ASA Filmudlejning
      • Cadre Films
      • Cinema Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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