There are bad adventure movies, and then there’s The Island—a film so unintentionally ridiculous that it feels like someone tried to make Jaws again but forgot the shark and replaced it with 17th-century French cosplayers who smell like rum and disappointment. Directed by Michael Ritchie and written by Peter Benchley—yes, that Benchley, the man who made us afraid to go in the water—this was supposed to be a tense survival thriller. Instead, it’s the cinematic equivalent of getting stranded on a sandbar with a flat beer and a group of history reenactors who won’t break character.
Plot: Kidnap, Brainwash, Repeat
Blair Maynard (Michael Caine), a journalist and ex-Navy man, decides to investigate mysterious boat disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle. Naturally, he brings along his estranged son Justin, because nothing says “bonding” like dragging your kid into a potential maritime death trap. They’re fishing one day when they’re attacked by what appears to be the world’s angriest beach bum.
Turns out they’ve been captured by a centuries-old colony of French pirates who’ve been living on an uncharted Caribbean island since the 1600s. Somehow, in all that time, they’ve avoided detection, modern dental care, and showers. These pirates, led by Nau (David Warner, trying so hard to look menacing while wearing what looks like a moth-eaten Renaissance fair outfit), raid yachts for supplies and kill the survivors. Unless, of course, you’re Michael Caine—because they think he’s descended from some famous pirate hunter and, more importantly, they need fresh DNA to keep their inbred gene pool from turning into a puddle.
Blair’s job? Get kidnapped, impregnate a pirate widow named Beth (because romance is dead), and act as their scribe. Justin, meanwhile, is brainwashed to become the heir to Nau’s swashbuckling nightmare. Blair spends the movie plotting escape, failing, plotting again, failing again, and occasionally looking like he wishes he’d taken literally any other role offered to him in 1980.
Michael Caine: Man, Myth, Mortgage Payment
Michael Caine has gone on record saying he’s never actually seen Jaws: The Revenge, but I suspect The Island is another title he’s quietly buried in the backyard of his career. His Blair Maynard is less “fearless investigative journalist” and more “confused British tourist trying to order a sandwich in broken French.” He plays most of the film with the haunted eyes of a man thinking, This was supposed to be a vacation to Disney World.
David Warner: Pirate King of the Overactors
David Warner’s Nau is supposed to be terrifying—a brutal pirate leader keeping his colony alive through cunning, fear, and the occasional Coast Guard massacre. Instead, Warner looks like he wandered in from a Shakespeare in the Park production of Treasure Island and decided to go full ham. He growls, he struts, he delivers every line like he’s auditioning for a Captain Morgan commercial.
Pacing: Like a Ship Dead in the Water
This movie takes a high-concept premise—modern man vs. ancient pirate civilization—and then drags it out so long you start rooting for scurvy to take the entire cast. The middle act is just a repetitive loop of Blair trying to escape, getting caught, and being smacked around by pirates who apparently have an infinite supply of time and bad teeth.
Action: Coast Guard vs. Dumb Luck
The climax is meant to be thrilling: Blair finally sets things up so the pirates run into a U.S. Coast Guard cutter. Except, instead of a tense naval showdown, the pirates wipe out the Coast Guard crew like they’re playing a round of Call of Duty: Colonial Warfare. Blair eventually finds a hidden M2 machine gun and turns the deck into a pirate blender, mowing down his captors with the gleeful overkill of a man who’s been waiting 90 minutes for this moment.
The final duel between Blair and Nau ends with Caine firing a flare gun into Warner’s chest—a moment that should be awesome, but instead plays like a budget version of Die Hard where John McClane wears a linen shirt and smells faintly of rum.
Production: $20 Million Buys a Lot of Mediocrity
This wasn’t some cheapo B-movie. Oh no, the producers paid Peter Benchley a record $2.15 million for the rights and screenplay, plus a cut of the gross. The budget reportedly hit over $20 million—money that apparently went into location shooting, Michael Caine’s fee, and the pirates’ historically accurate but aggressively ugly wardrobes.
It was filmed in gorgeous spots like Antigua and Abaco, but you’d never know because most of the cinematography looks like it was done by someone with sunscreen smeared on the lens.
Tone: Lost at Sea
Benchley’s novel was a dark, tense thriller. The movie? Tonally confused. It lurches between grim brutality—pirates casually murdering innocent boaters—and awkward father-son bonding moments that play like outtakes from a bad family drama. Then there’s the whole “forced breeding” subplot, which is both creepy and handled with all the sensitivity of a cannonball to the face.
Final Verdict: Arrr-ful Cinema
The Island is proof that throwing money, Michael Caine, and a bestselling author at a project doesn’t guarantee treasure. It’s part survival thriller, part swashbuckling adventure, and part hostage drama, but all of it is sunk by bad pacing, goofy villains, and a script that treats logic like a plank to be walked.
If you like your pirates dirty, your action clumsy, and your Michael Caine looking like he’s reconsidering all his life choices, this is your movie. Otherwise, best to let this one stay marooned.

