The Island (1980 film)

The Island is a 1980 American thriller film, directed by Michael Ritchie and starring Michael Caine and David Warner. The film was based on a novel of the same name by Peter Benchley who also wrote the screenplay. It is about a savage group of pirates, made up of outcasts, thieves, and murderers, who are hidden from the outside world by an uncharted Caribbean island, and who've raided boats to sustain themselves, since the 18th century.

Plot synopsis

Blair Maynard (Michael Caine) is a British-born American journalist who was once in the Navy, decides to investigate the mystery of why so many boats disappear in the Bermuda Triangle of the Caribbean. He takes his estranged son Justin with him to the area on the "vacation" and, while fishing, both are attacked by an unkempt man and forcibly brought to an uncharted island. On the island, Blair discovers the terrible truth: the inhabitants on the island are actually a centuries old colony of savage French pirates.

The group has been living on the island for centuries, unseen by society, who sustain themselves by raiding pleasure boats. The pirates kill whoever comes to the island, however, Blair and his son are both kept alive due to a false assumption regarding their lineage and a need to offset the negative effects of inbreeding. Blair is used to impregnate a female (Angela Punch McGregor) and act as a scribe for the largely illiterate group, while Justin is brainwashed to become a surrogate heir to Nau, the pirate leader (David Warner). Blair struggles to escape from the island, but all attempts fail.

Island (disambiguation)

An island is a land mass entirely surrounded by water.

Island or Islands may also refer to:

Places

  • Any of various islands around the world, see the list of islands
  • Iceland (Icelandic: Ísland)
    • Island (without the accent) is also the name of Iceland in several other languages, such as German and Swedish
  • Island (without the accent) is also the name of Iceland in several other languages, such as German and Swedish
  • Island, Belfast, Northern Ireland, an electoral ward
  • The Island, New Jersey (disambiguation), two places
  • Island, Kentucky, a city in the United States
  • Island, Yonne, a commune of the Yonne département in France
  • The Islands, a defunct provincial electoral district in British Columbia once part of Nanaimo and the Islands and now part of Saanich North and the Islands
  • Island County, Washington, United States
  • The Island, Chennai, a river island in India
  • The Island, Hythe End, an island in the River Thames in England
  • The Island, Chicago, a neighborhood in Chicago, U.S.
  • The Island, Hythe End

    The Island, Hythe End is an inhabited island in the River Thames in England on the reach above Bell Weir Lock, a part of the Hythe End part of Wraysbury village and civil parish, Berkshire. It is connected to that side of the river and although part of Berkshire was, like the village, part of Buckinghamshire before 1974.

    The Island lies alongside the course of Egham Regatta.


    See also

  • Islands in the River Thames
  • Coordinates: 51°26′31″N 0°32′49″W / 51.44194°N 0.54694°W / 51.44194; -0.54694

    The Island (Paul Brady song)

    "The Island" is a 1985 song by Irish musician Paul Brady, who comes from Strabane in County Tyrone.

    The song appeared on the album 'Back to the Centre', and features Kenny Craddiock on piano. The only other instrument is a guitar solo by Phil Palmer The album was produced by long time Brady collaborator Ian Maidman (later known as Jennifer Maidman).

    The start of the song compares the tragic events of the Lebanese Civil War with the Troubles in Northern Ireland in the 1980s. Comments are made on activities in Northern Ireland: "They're rising banners over by the markets / Whitewashing slogans on the shipyard wall". "The Markets" is a well known Republican area surrounding St George's Market in Belfast, and the shipyard is that of Harland and Wolff in East Belfast, near a Loyalist area. The song then compares the peace and serenity of making love on the island with the hypocrisy of some religious leaders and the tragedy of young people being "sacrificed" (on both sides) for political beliefs.

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