The Beach Kiss Body Double
The scene replays Vertigo's spinning kiss, and audiences laughed
Midway through the film, Jake follows Gloria through a shopping mall and onto the beach. He chases a disfigured man into a tunnel, where his claustrophobia locks him up. Gloria helps him out, and the two — strangers who have never spoken — fall into a passionate kiss. De Palma stages it as a direct quotation of the Vertigo kiss between Stewart and Novak: the camera spins in a 360-degree rotation around the embracing couple as Pino Donaggio's score swells. But De Palma pushes the technique further than Hitchcock did. The film cuts from location footage to what is obviously a soundstage — the actors on a revolving platform, the beach replaced by rear projection.
On the Body Double Blu-ray, De Palma acknowledges that audiences laughed at the scene. He had intended it to be serious.
"When Scully finally speaks to Gloria, they immediately melt into one another in a dizzying session of liplocking and heavy petting while De Palma's camera spins around them over and over and over again." — Midnight Only, Body Double (1984) (2014)
The A.V. Club described the disconnect between the two halves of the shot: De Palma "goes way the hell out for his version, cutting abruptly from footage of the actors smooching outdoors to them clearly on a soundstage, on some revolving platform, against a projected backdrop of a beach." (avclub)
The artificiality breaks the audience's identification with Jake
The problem is one of perspective. For the film's voyeurism structure to work, the audience needs to be inside Jake's point of view — watching what he watches, wanting what he wants. De Palma has built this identification carefully through the first half: the telescope scenes, the mall tailing sequence, the long Steadicam shots that put the camera where Jake's eyes are. The audience is complicit in his voyeurism because the film gives them no other position.
The beach kiss ruptures this. The rear projection and the spinning camera announce themselves as technique. The audience stops seeing through Jake's eyes and starts seeing through De Palma's. One reviewer put the shift plainly:
"It's hard to believe that it's supposed to connect you, rather than disconnect you, from the characters." — ccpopculture, Body Double (1984) (2016)
The Film Stage offered a different reading — that the disconnect was the point. As the characters kiss, "the camera starts encircling the couple frenetically, as though struggling to capture this spiral of pure pleasure, while a green screen projection of the beach replaces the real one." The effect makes the moment "bigger than life, a dream coming true" rather than grounded reality. (thefilmstage)
The scene has no narrative logic, which compounds the tonal problem
The kiss doesn't just look artificial — it makes no sense within the story. Jake has been following Gloria without her knowledge. He has just frozen in a panic attack inside a tunnel. Gloria has no reason to kiss a man she has never met, and every reason to be alarmed by him. The Midnight Only reviewer noted the absurdity:
"It's such an absurd sequence (they have no reason to kiss; in fact, she has every reason to issue a restraining order against him) that it plays better when you view it as parody." — Midnight Only, Body Double (1984) (2014)
Read as parody, the scene works — it's Jake's fantasy of what a movie hero's life should look like, staged in the visual language of a movie he's too passive to actually be in. Read straight, it's a romantic clinch between two strangers that collapses under the weight of its own technique.
The debate is whether De Palma intended the failure
The split in critical readings comes down to intentionality. If the scene is meant to sweep the audience up in Jake's fantasy, it fails — the technique is too visible, the logic too strained, and the audience laughs. If the scene is meant to show that Jake's desire is itself a performance — a man acting out a Vertigo fantasy because he's an actor who can't tell movies from life — then the laughter is the point.
De Palma's own disappointment with the audience reaction suggests he was closer to the first reading than the second. But the film keeps working either way. After the kiss, Gloria runs into the tunnel — the space Jake's claustrophobia won't let him enter — and the fantasy collapses. Jake goes back to his telescope. The kiss changes nothing. It's a moment where the film's machinery becomes visible, and whether that's a mistake or a thesis depends on how much credit you give De Palma for the things in his films that don't work.