Allie Fox (Harrison Ford) is an eccentric inventor who is a know-it-all. He feels superior to everybody else, and is always angry at the world. One day, he decides to pack up his family (Helen Mirren, River Phoenix) and move to Central America in a region called the Mosquito Coast. He then buys his own ramshackle town and starts building including a big ice factory. He doesn't get along with the preacher neighbor Reverend Spellgood. Then three thugs with guns invade their isolation.
Harrison Ford is crazy in this one. If you're looking to watch a mad man, then this is your movie. However it's impossible to root for this family. In a rare movie, River Phoenix is completely overshadowed by the manic Ford. It's possibly one of the more maddening movies around. It should be much more compelling. It should be a great viewing experience. But it must feel like what it is to be part of that family. Every time there is hope for this movie, the father maddeningly destroys it.
The Mosquito Coast
1986
Action / Adventure / Drama / Thriller
Plot summary
An eccentric and dogmatic inventor sells his house and takes his family to Central America to build a utopia in the middle of the jungle. Conflicts with his family, a local preacher, and with nature are only small obstacles to his obsession. Based on the novel by Paul Theroux.
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Movie Reviews
Crazy Harrison Ford
A precursor to "Fight Club"?
When I took an Australian cinema class in summer 2003, we talked about how a common theme in Australian movies is communication issues. In "Walkabout", the sister can't communicate with the Aborigine but the brother can; in "Picnic at Hanging Rock", it never gets communicated what happens; in "Strictly Ballroom", they portray dancing (physical communication).
Peter Weir made his American debut with "Witness", in which Harrison Ford's character has to communicate with the Amish. In Weir's "The Mosquito Coast", Ford plays Allie Fox, a man disgusted with American society and how it communicates junk to everyone. Moving his family to Central America, Fox hopes to create a utopia but just the opposite happens.
This seems like many situations that we've seen, so maybe "The Mosquito Coast" is nothing special. But it's certainly worth seeing, if only to look for communication issues. I wonder whether it was a sort of precursor to "Fight Club".
An unsatisfying outcome to a story involving a highly self-absorbed and egocentric genius
While this movie starts with a promising storyline and a character that while not always likable (and quite self-absorbed for the entirety of the film),still has interesting thoughts on the American way of living and an incredible craftsmanship, it soon leaves you with disdain about this character and the interest that had been developed in the 1st hour of the movie soon turns into a drag, leaving you feeling frustrated about why these characters are being silent towards the father's reckless and almost-deadly treatment. The father turns from a man with a vision of building a civilisation from scratch into a man obsessed with not abiding to any form of current civilisation and living. He drags his family through dangerous situations for the sole purpose of making a living based on his narrow-minded view of how humans should live life. And while this could still make for an interesting storyline, the sole outcome of the terrain his family experiences is that with his sudden passing, they can now be free to live life the way they want to – a somehow unsatisfying final outcome when you consider the ordeal these people had to go through.