🌊 The First Wave: A Winter Film Series to Keep Sand in Your Soul

When the wind whips cold across the Jersey dunes and your flip-flops are buried under boots and scarves…what’s a beach bum to do?

You watch the beach, of course.

This winter, we’re launching a new film (and maybe book!) blog series here at Down the Shore: A Field Guide, spotlighting movies that bring the beach to life – in all its sun-drenched, wave-sloshed, sometimes terrifying, always unforgettable glory.

And we’re starting waaaaay back.
Like… 1896 back.
Before the “beach movie” was even a thing.

🎬 Our first featured short is The First Wave – one of the earliest moving pictures ever filmed, capturing a simple moment of a wave crashing on shore. Think of it as the cinematic big bang that launched 100 years of beach dreams.

Want to go even deeper? Check out:

  • La Mer (1895) – The Lumière brothers filming splashes in France
  • Baignade en mer (1897) – More joyful seaside dunking
    These are more than just early beach scenes – they’re some of the first films ever made.

đź’ˇ But this is just the beginning.

We’ll keep rolling through cinematic history – from the passionate tide of From Here to Eternity (1953), to the surf-silly world of Gidget (1959), the existential dread of On the Beach (1959), and the terror that made you think twice before going in the water…Jaws (1975).

📬 Your Turn
Got a favorite beach-themed movie? A sun-soaked romance? A shoreline thriller? A novel that smells like sunscreen and seaweed?

We want to hear from you!

  • Drop us a comment
  • Email us your recs
  • Or better yet: write your own short post and we might feature it!

Let’s build a beachside watchlist together – and keep our toes in the cinematic sand all winter long.

🌀 First up: Watch The First Wave here
Then meet us back here next week for the next film in our sandy saga…

Stay salty,
The Sandbar Society

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