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* For the entry on the FilmOfTheBook, go to Film.TheBeast.

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* For the entry on the FilmOfTheBook, TheFilmOfTheBook, go to Film.TheBeast.

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* For a completely different movie, go to Film.{{Beast}}.

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* For a completely different movie, go to Film.{{Beast}}.

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A 1991 novel by PeterBenchley (author of ''{{Jaws}}''), ''Beast'' deals with a series of attacks on Bermudan shipping and swimmers by an incredibley hostile giant squid. It was adapted into a film in 1996 under the slightly changed name of ''TheBeast''.

In both versions, the main character is Whip Darling, a longtime Bermuda fisherman. Despite his occupation, Whip deeply loves the ocean and the creatures in it, and has no respect for those who refuse to fish sustainably. He is also a realist, and makes every effort to steer clear of the would-be squid hunters, correctly predicting that such an expedition can only end in failure. Eventually however, Whip's need for money causes him to be drawn into the expedition, alongside longtime friend Marcus, Canadian scientist Dr. Herbert Talley, and CorruptCorporateExecutive Osborn Manning, leading to a final, climactic confrontation with the monster.

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A 1991 novel by PeterBenchley (author of ''{{Jaws}}''), ''Beast'' deals with a series of attacks on Bermudan shipping and swimmers by an incredibley hostile giant squid. It was adapted into a film in 1996 under the slightly changed name of ''TheBeast''.

In both versions, the main character is Whip Darling, a longtime Bermuda fisherman. Despite his occupation, Whip deeply loves the ocean and the creatures in it, and has no respect for those who refuse
link to fish sustainably. He is also a realist, and makes every effort something about "Beast" sent you to steer clear this page. The context of the would-be squid hunters, correctly predicting that such an expedition can only end in failure. Eventually however, Whip's need for money causes him to be drawn into link should help you figure out which page you want.

* For
the expedition, alongside longtime friend Marcus, Canadian scientist Dr. Herbert Talley, and CorruptCorporateExecutive Osborn Manning, leading to a final, climactic confrontation with entry on the monster.original book, go to Literature.{{Beast}}.
* For the entry on the FilmOfTheBook, go to Film.TheBeast.
* For a completely different movie, go to Film.{{Beast}}.



'''Tropes Appearing In This Book Include:'''
* AnimalWrongsGroup: The "Save-The-Squid" crowd. As Whip puts it, "''Architeuthis dux'' is doing a fine job of saving itself."
* AttackOfThe50FootWhatever: The squid is eventually revealed to be over a hundred feet long. This is ''not'' as [[HighOctaneNightmareFuel far-fetched as it sounds]].
* CanadaEh: Talley, complete with Maritime accent.
* ChainsawGood: After the squid sinks the boat, Whip fends it off with a chainsaw, severing several of its limbs, before the monster disarms him.
* CorruptCorporateExecutive: A surprisingly sympathetic version. Osborn Manning has a lot of money and he certainly throws his weight around, what with blackmailing Whip into helping him. That said, he's also got a very understandable motivation: his son and daughter were killed by the squid and he wants revenge.
* DesignatedHero/ DesignatedVillain: A review of this movie on Jabootu.net named the tropes.
* DeusExMachina: The squid sinks Whip's boat, kills Osborn Manning, and nearly gets Talley, Marcus, and Whip when a sperm whale erupts out of the water and tears it in half.
* TheEndOrIsIt: The squid is dead, yet as the epilogue shows, more and more of them are being born every year.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Osborn Manning certainly does.
* EverythingsSquishierWithCephalopods: Indeed.
* ExtremeOmnivore: The squid is too dumb to tell the difference between living animals and inorganic matter, leading to attacks on boats and submarines.
* GaiasVengeance: Why is the squid here? Well largely because we've killed off most of the animals that eat them when they're babies (tuna, sharks, sea turtles), and most of the animals that eat them when they're adults (sperm whales), and all the food at the bottom of the ocean that they normally eat. That's right kids: we're increasing the numbers of one of the few animals that can fight us on relatively even terms.
* IGaveMyWord: Both Whip and Manning operate on this principle.
* ILetGwenStacyDie: Marcus' girlfriend was killed by a box jellyfish. He's pretty much defined by it. And then, just as it seems he might be moving on with photographer Stephanie, she's killed by the squid.
* JawsFirstPersonPerspective: Much of the novel is from the point of view of the squid.
* {{Jerkass}}: Osborn Manning, though he does have more principles than one might expect from a CorruptCorporateExecutive. Liam St. John is a straight example, and a moron to boot.
* TheJuggernaut: The squid. This isn't too far off from RealLife either. There really isn't much that human made weapons can do to an animal that's that big and has no bones or easily targetable organs.
* KarmicDeath: It is heavily implied that the whale that kills the squid is the mother of the baby one that it devoured earlier.
* MythologyGag: Whip mocks ''Jaws'', one of Benchley's other works, as being BS.
* PoisonedWeapons: The only way that people can kill the squid. St. John uses a poisoned harpoon and a giant poisoned bang stick, Osborn Manning uses an AK-47 in which phosphorus bullets have been replaced with cyanide.
* {{Revenge}}: Osborn Manning wants it on the squid.
** RevengeBeforeReason: Manning has a bad case of this, and it ultimately gets him killed.
* ScienceIsBad: Whip chastises himself for putting faith in science, saying "The only thing scientists admit is what they know. What they don't know - what might be, all the stuff in the in the realm of the possible but unproven - they dismiss as myth." Something of a Wallbanger.
* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Osborn Manning again.
* SharpDressedMan: Osborn Manning.
* SmugSnake: Liam St. John; Osborn Manning might count too.
* SuperPersistentPredator: The squid ends up like this after Manning, Talley, and Whip first trick it into believing there's a mate nearby, and then try to kill it.
* TooDumbToLive: Dr. Liam St. John, who first tries to kill the squid with dynamite, then rents a submarine...and promptly wastes one of his weapons on killing a shark instead of on the squid, leading to his death and that of his entire crew.
* TragicMonster: The squid may be big, violent, and destructive, but Benchley makes a point of showing that it's only an animal in an unfamiliar environment, doing what it has to in order to eat.
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* DesingatedHero/ DesignatedVillain: A review of this movie on Jabootu.net named the tropes.

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* DesingatedHero/ DesignatedHero/ DesignatedVillain: A review of this movie on Jabootu.net named the tropes.
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*DesingatedHero/ DesignatedVillain: A review of this movie on Jabootu.net named the tropes.
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* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Osborn Manning again.

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Trope renaming and misuse cleanup.


* TheEndOrIsIt: The squid is dead, yet as the epilogue shows, more and more of them are being born every year.



* OrIsIt: An odd variant. The squid is dead, yet as the epilogue shows, more and more of them are being born every year. [[HighOctaneNightmareFuel Ahh]]!

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* EvenEvilHasStandards: Osborn Manning certainly does.



* SmugSnake: Liam St. John.

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* SmugSnake: Liam St. John.John; Osborn Manning might count too.

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