
Inside the eerie abandoned resort in the Maldives - with rotting overwater villas but still breathtaking views
The world might know the Maldives for its picture-postcard villas, turquoise waters, and once-in-a-lifetime luxury escapes.
But one island in the middle of this tropical paradise tells a completely different story - one of decay, mystery, and ambitious plans left abandoned.
In a video uploaded to YouTube in 2023, Australian filmmaker and surfer Kale Brock explained that while on the retreat in the Maldives, he and his group had spotted a 'mysterious' island in the distance and convinced their guide to take them there.
What they discovered was straight out of a movie - more Jurassic Park than five-star luxury getaway.
In incredible footage, which has since amassed over 180,000 views, Brock takes viewers on a surreal tour through a deserted resort that looks like it was evacuated mid-build.
Eerie scenes show the group wandering through half-finished villas, piles of debris and broken toilets, dilapidated rooms with unpowered generators, and murky, unkempt pools teeming with algae.
According to Brock, the island was reportedly owned by a prominent Maldivian politician, with construction starting over a decade ago.
He said: 'They were building for two years then for "political reasons." We don't really know, ostensibly maybe they ran out of money. They've literally abandoned the project… There's bathtubs in unopened but deteriorating boxes.'
Walking through the ruins, Brock captures everything from unopened spa equipment still in boxes, to massage tables covered in dust and junk, to filthy pools thick with plant life.
Standing above what would have been a centrepiece pool, Brock added: 'Just imagine the views and the vibes, the aesthetics this place would have.'
In one spot, the group find an old Mazda and Nissan, which appear not to have moved in years, before moving on to what appears to be a generator room, complete with a bizarre row of machines.
Brock listed a number of Hollywood blockbusters he was reminded of while exploring the ruins, including Ghostbusters, Jurassic Park and Lost.
But perhaps the most haunting part of the tour were the ghostly remains of what would've been the resort's showstoppers - overwater bungalows meant to charge $5,000 a night.
Now, they're nothing more than skeletons of wood and steel, with scenes showing Brock ambling along the concrete foundation of what would have been an iconic wooden walkway.
As he looked out across the water, he noted: 'World-class lives one kilometre away.'
Meanwhile, a Maldivian woman who spent almost 10 years working in the tourism sector at the hugely popular holiday destination has shared her hidden gems and budget tips.
According to Brock, the island was reportedly owned by a prominent Maldivian politician, with construction starting over a decade ago
Now, they're nothing more than skeletons of wood, concrete and steel sitting above the water
The mother-of-one had worked tirelessly behind the scenes, including long hours while raising her seven-month-old daughter in the process.
Now 32, she is happily married and has quit the tourism industry to launch a freelancer app that aims to 'connect Maldivians across the islands'.
She has also shared her top tips with keen travellers - including one hidden gem island that is perfect for those travelling on a budget.
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The secret pact between Prince William and Kate Middleton after their brief breakup, according to royal expert
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6 hours ago
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Real life mafia boss reveals which gangster movie is the most accurate
A former mafia boss has discussed 10 of the lines described as the best ever from gangster films. Michael Franzese, who is originally from New York and served as a caporegime in the Colombo crime family, is now a motivational speaker, TV personality and content creator. He has a YouTube channel where he regularly speaks candidly about the crime organisation and life afterwards. In a recent video, the father-of-seven read an article titled The 10 Best Quotes in Gangster Movies, Ranked published by Collider, and offered his thoughts on the lines presented in the piece. Speaking about the piece, Mr Franzese said: 'There are so many great quotes from so many of the mob movies that most of you are familiar with. 'I came across an article, and I want to talk about 10 of the greatest quotes according to this article, from all the different mob movies. 'Some of you are going to disagree with that. Some of you are going to agree. I have my own opinion, but it's a good article. 'I think you're going to enjoy it. Let's go through it. Let's face it, you know, many of these mob movies, they're just iconic, and some of the lines that come out of them and the way they're delivered are just great. They stick with you.' 10. 'You don't keep a man waiting. The only time you do is when you want to say something. When you want to say f*** you.' (The Irishman, 2019) Speaking about this quote in his video, Mr Franzese said: 'How many of you right now can guess where that line came from? I could because I love the scene.' The line is from the 2019 movie The Irishman directed by Martin Scorsese. Describing the scene the line is in, Mr Franzese said: 'Al Pacino played Jimmy Hoffa [...] I thought he was brilliant.' The scene shows mobster Anthony Provenzano (Stephen Graham) meeting with Hoffa and his employee Frank Sheeran (Robert De Niro). Provenzano is late - something Hoffa despises. As the two men wait for his arrival, Hoffa says to Sheeran: 'You don't keep a man waiting. The only time you do is when you want to say something. When you want to say f*** you.' 9. 'You slap me in a dream, you better wake up and apologize.' (Angels with Dirty Faces, 1938) Many contemporary film fans may remember a very similar line from Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, but the original came from 1938 classic Angels with Dirty Faces. 'You slap me in a dream, you better wake up and apologize,' said Mr Franzese of the line. 'Think about that [...] What a gangster, gangster quote that is [...] if you haven't seen [the film, it's]. It's in black and white, but Cagney was brilliant back then. Different kind of way they carried themselves. 'It wasn't really mob mafia type. It was just a gangster [...] an old school gangster movie that still holds up well, benefiting from the fact that it stars the likes of James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart, of course.' 8. Policeman: 'What's in the car?' Turkish: 'Seats and a steering wheel.' (Snatch, 2000) Describing Guy Ritchie as a 'brilliant' director, Mr Franzese said his style is defined by 'fast paced editing, bursts of shocking violence, numerous characters, all interacting in unpredictable ways, and lots of dark humor, all qualities that are apparent in the movie snatch, great movie'. Describing the exchange between a policeman and the character Turkish (played by Jason Statham), in which the policeman asks what is in the car, and Statham's character replies that there is a steering wheel and seats, Franzese saiid: 'It's [Statham's] unique style and voice and overall bluntness that really sells it. So go see Snatch.' 7. 'One of us had to die. With me, it tends to be the other guy'. (The Departed, 2006) Martin Scorsese's 2006 remake of the Hong Kong film Infernal Affairs marks the only time the celebrated director and top actor Jack Nicholson worked together - a partnership which yielded on screen gold. In the movie, Nicholson's character Frank Costello was based on the real life notorious gangster James 'Whitey' Bulger. Speaking about Costello's line: 'One of us had to die. With me, it tends to be the other guy,' Mr Franzese said many gangsters are funny in real life. He said: 'They don't even know they're funny [...]Guys on the street are funny, I got to tell you.' 6. 'I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse.' (The Godfather, 1972) Speaking about this cinematic classic, the former mobster said: 'Everybody and their brother knows this line. And of course, it was brilliant [...] Obviously we know who that was brilliant, brilliant film. 'You can't really talk about iconic gangster movies without at least briefly bringing up the Godfather.' He added: 'Corleone is obviously a character for the ages, no doubt, demonstrating charisma, loyalty, empathy and ruthlessness, sometimes all within one scene. How do you pull that off, all those emotions in one scene? And [actor Marlon Brando] pulled it off brilliantly.' 5. 'Made it, Ma! Top of the world!' (White Heat, 1949) Describing White Heat as a 'final and explosive last hurrah for the Golden Age of Hollywood gangster movie', Mr Franzese described the film as 'arguably James Cagney's best gangster movie', adding that is 'really saying something'. The line, which comes at the climax of the film, marks the final words of Cagney's character, before he is killed. Simply summing up the picture, Mr Franzese said: 'Gangster film, brilliant movie.' 4. 'From now on, I want you to put an equal amount of blueberries in each muffin.' (Casino, 1995) Casino is another picture helmed by American Italian auteur Martin Scorsese - often considered the greatest living director. Robert De Niro plays Sam 'Ace' Rothstein in the picture, which tells the story of the mob's involvement in the development of Las Vegas. While overseeing the daily operations of a major casino, Rothstein gets angry with a chef because one muffin is full of blueberries and another only has a few. He orders the chef to ensure there is an 'equal amount of blueberries in each muffin' - a task the chef says will take hours. The line represents the controlling nature and perfectionism of De Niro's character. Mr Franzese said of the film: 'As a consumer, and a guy that loves blueberry muffins, I'd be a little upset if there wasn't enough blueberries in my muffin. 'So I think that was a good line. It made sense, but it was delivered like a true gangster. Love it.' 3. 'So say good night to the bad guy! Come on. The last time you gonna see a bad guy like this again, let me tell you.' (Scarface, 1983) 'Everybody knows this,' Mr Franzese said of this line from Scarface. The picture stars Al Pacino as a Cuban refugee who comes to America and becomes a major player in the criminal world. Speaking about the quote, which takes place when Montana causes a scene in a restaurant, Mr Franzese describes the performance as his best. He also noted another very famous line from the talkie: 'Say hello to my little friend.' 'Unbelievable movie,' said the former mafioso. 'That was the way it ended, when he's fighting [...] Just a brilliant movie.' 2. 'I'm funny how, I mean funny like I'm a clown, I amuse you? I make you laugh, I'm here to f****** amuse you?' (Goodfellas, 1990) Another exceptional film directed by Martin Scorsese is Goodfellas, based on the memoire of real-life character Henry Hill. In fact, Michael Franzese is himself name checked in the movie. During an early scene in a bar, where the camera pans past a number of characters, narrator Henry Hill (played by the late Ray Liotta) names them. One of the characters, referred to as 'Michael Francesi' is, in fact, representative of Michael Franzese. While the movie is packed full of quotable lines, one of the most popular scenes features the volatile and unpredictable character Tommy DeVito (played by Joe Pesci). In it, Henry laughs when Tommy says something amusing. This becomes a terse interchange in which Tommy asks Henry if he sees him as a clown, there simply to amuse him, before finally laughing and revealing he was just teasing. Because of Tommy's mercurial and violent nature, the characters around him grow increasingly tense, unsure of whether he is being serious. Mr Franzese said of the line: 'It is legendary, unbelievable. Come on, think about that line. Funny how think about and [...] it was a joke, but look at how everybody got scared because they knew what kind of a maniac he was. Was he going to get up and shoot Henry Hill at that point? What was he going to do? Was he going to knock the table over, throw the glasses over? It was all. Nobody knew what he was going to do. 'And all of a sudden, the way, he broke [...] into that line [...] And then, of course, they break out in laughter.' He added: 'Brilliant line. There were other brilliant lines in that film, but Joe Pesci, he is the typical gangster without a doubt.' 1. 'I don't feel I have to wipe everybody out, Tom. Just my enemies.' (The Godfather: Part II, 1974) The second instalment in the Godfather saga saw the further corruption of Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) as he inherited his father Vito's empire. Speaking about the line, which Corleone said to his consigliere Tom, Mr Franzese noted how it highlighted how Corleone ended up alienated from everyone because of his own lifestyle. He also spoke about how the line resonated with his own life experience, describing how his father's commitment to the lifestyle affected his family. He said: 'You know the reason people, I say the mob life is an evil lifestyle - and I'm not calling the men evil, I'm calling the mob life bad and evil - is because families get destroyed. 'The families have made members get destroyed, and at the end of the day, guys end up in prison with nobody you know, or they end up dead, or they end up broke, or they end up everybody being alienated from them. It happens very often. Any lifestyle [...] that causes that to a family, is a bad lifestyle. 'It's something that I realized. I experienced it with my own family that was destroyed because of my father's involvement in that life. So I get it. I really get what was being said there.'


Wales Online
11 hours ago
- Wales Online
There's a tiny hidden village in Wales where everyone lives in fairytale huts dotted around the woodland
There's a tiny hidden village in Wales where everyone lives in fairytale huts dotted around the woodland From the rocky country road it's hard to pick out the village which is renowned for its tipis - but nowadays the majority of the residents live in tiny turf-roofed huts which blend into the green landscape Peter Francis, 73, has lived at Tipi Valley in Carmarthenshire since 1983 (Image: John Myers ) The 100 or so folk of Tipi Valley in the wilds of west Wales don't have rules except for that shoes must be left at the entrance of their huts, yurts, or tipis - a steep tent made from canvas and held up by poles in their centre. From the rocky country road leading to the nearby village of Cwmdu in Carmarthenshire it's hard to pick out the village renowned for its tipis but where nowadays the majority of the residents live in tiny turf-roofed huts which blend into the green landscape perfectly, so much so I hadn't known I'd arrived at Rik Mayes' hut until it was pointed out to me from yards away. One of the eco-friendly huts costs around £5,000 to build and is 80% biodegradable. More efficient than the tipi, the huts have seen Tipi Valley lauded as a leading case study for sustainable and cheap living, while they are a pleasant addition to the hidden village which looks like something out of a fairytale. The people living here - some of whom still refer to themselves as hippies - weren't always welcomed by some in Cwmdu and Llandeilo before. Search Tipi Valley on Youtube and you'll find some old news clips of farmers questioning the hippies' right to be on the land. One councillor - Roland Morgan - even claimed some businesses had "no hippies" signs in their windows. While the residents of Tipi Valley have owned the land since 1976, the majority of the now 100 acres was purchased for agricultural usage with no planning permission for residential structures. The core issue surrounding the legitimacy of the land's use revolved around the legality of the nomadic structures on the land. While some of the structures at the site were initially deemed unlawful any worries the Tipi Valley residents had of being turfed out were helped when Valley dweller Brig Oubridge won a landmark legal case in 2006 - after a 13-year battle - which concluded his three tents and caravan were lawful. All of the huts have now been in the Valley for more than four years without any enforcement action, and so can stay put. Article continues below 'The council came to terms with us being here many years ago while knowing our ecological mission as such was to live here very simply,' Rik, a reverend originally from London and who has lived here since 1978, tells WalesOnline from his little wooden dwelling which could be mistaken for a garden shed but inside is like a tardis comprising a bed, a sofa, a television, a tiny kitchen, a shower unit and an office space. 'They've decided to let us get on with it,' he says. Rik Mayes in his medieval-like roundhouse hut - an eco-friendly home (Image: John Myers ) Rik Mayes has lived at Tipi Valley since 1978 and says he intends to stay in the eco village for the rest of his life (Image: John Myers ) Rik, 77, is at the top of the valley and is one of very few residents at Tipi who has access to a decent mobile phone signal, and so has taken on the role of a sort of de facto village receptionist. He scoffs at any suggestion he has a leading role in the community though, telling me there is no such thing. Tipi Valley has no hierarchy with the hippies believing the land is the owner of all of us. Nobody pays rent for their dwellings other than one family who stay in a more typical cottage which was bought by the community in 1998. There is no formal vetting process either for anyone who wants to rock up and give living here a crack. 'You have to weigh up whether you can cope with the lifestyle and the climate,' Rik explains. 'That's how Tipi Valley started. We bought the land in 1976 because we wanted people to have the opportunity to come along and give it a go, and that's the way it is. 'We are unique in that sense. There are not many places in the whole of the UK now where that could happen. If you want land in the UK now you're paying a lot of money for it or you're buying a piece of farmland, for example, which is usually far too big. 'We never started with a vision or a big grand plan. This place was just built by experience. We've just saved as many pennies as we could and we've bought little pieces of land here bit by bit. Now the residents of Tipi Valley have bought 100 acres themselves.' One hut can cost around £5,000 to build and are mostly biodegradable (Image: John Myers ) The huts melt into the green landscape perfectly, almost hidden (Image: John Myers ) Almost all of the residents live off grid while some - a handful - still live in tipis. Those who turn up at Tipi Valley, intrigued by a different way of living and hoping to become a permanent resident, tend to stay in the 'big lodge' - an oversized tipi where villagers meet monthly to eat and drink together and also congregate in the colder months. The big lodge is beside a stream which feeds a well where villagers get most of their water. 'People often still turn up and ask to stay here,' Rik says. 'Last week we had a guy staying in the big lodge who came so gently. He came to Swansea, booked a bed and breakfast, then caught a taxi up here and had the taxi wait for him while he came to us and asked permission if he could visit in future. I thought that was very polite. He came to visit just to ask permission to visit. A few days later he did come to visit properly and I believe he's in the big lodge at the moment. 'Another person in the big lodge turned up yesterday. He said his dad used to come here when he was young and he thinks he'd quite like to relocate here, so he's checking it out.' When we visit the big lodge we're greeted by Emily Driver who is inside the communal tipi which is uncomfortably warm. She's here to invite villagers to her dinner party at her yurt a short walk away. 'I was in the big lodge for four months and I loved it,' Emily, 32, who arrived here on her own last year, says. 'It's quite intense to live in at first. But it's such a grounding space. It slows you down. 'I arrived here from Leicester where I lived in the city and as soon as I got here it was a real crash. It was a huge change in speed and it was difficult to get accustomed to at first. I actually found it quite emotional. 'I remember ringing my mum crying and she said: 'Emily darling, why don't you sit down and have a cup of tea?' I shouted at her that it was so hard to even make tea in this place. But it's so good because it forces you to be patient.' Around 100 people live at Tipi Valley. The majority of the children attend or have attended the nearby Talley School - a Welsh medium school (Image: John Myers ) The village offers a more simple way of life which villagers say should be regarded as the norm (Image: John Myers ) Prior to visiting Tipi Valley for the first time Emily's grandfather had passed away, leading her to think about what she really wanted from her life. She had been a librarian in a prison before quitting her job and moving here. She recalls: 'Before he died grandad said to me: 'Take it whilst you can.' And I decided I wanted to live like this now while I can. I quit my job, quit my flat and came here. I've been here for a year now.' Asked if she intends to stay here for a long time she says: 'I don't really think like that. I don't think too much about what is to come. What it is guiding me at the moment are my seeds. My seeds need to be in the ground and watered so I'm here to do that. Once the seeds have grown and I've eaten them, who knows where life will take me?' 'Once people have been here for a while we let them build a permanent dwelling instead of living in a tipi,' Rik explains. He was out of the ordinary because he lived in a tipi for 35 years - far longer than most - before moving into the hut he originally built for his sons to live in while they were at school 'so they could turn out smartly'. Most of the Tipi Valley children go to the local Talley School, a Welsh medium school meaning most of the youngsters in the valley have varying degrees of Welsh language proficiency. Rik moved into the hut after his sons left school and then decided to move further down the valley closer to Cwmdu. 'Tipis and yurts are nomadic dwellings so we have to move them every six months to a different piece of land in the village,' he says. 'There is an art to pitching a tipi. It needs to be done in a certain way so when the rain comes the water runs down the tipi and off away from the tipi rather than back towards it. 'In the middle of your tipi you've got your hearth and the hearth gives you heat, light, cooking, everything. You live around that with your family. On the floor around that are rushes and on top of that are sheepskins. Around the edges are your baskets for clothes, wood and toys. You have to travel light in a tipi because you'll be moving on again soon.' The tipi called the big lodge by the villagers where newcomers live and where the locals congregate for community events (Image: John Myers ) Emily Driver moved to the eco village from Leicester after realising she wanted to live a different life while she is young (Image: John Myers ) Do many people come and go? 'Of course they do,' Rik laughs. 'If they didn't go we'd have about 4,000 people living here.' It isn't for the faint-hearted. Many people turn up believing the tipi life is the life they want, but sometimes they end up bringing the contents of their home with them and then they realise they can't hack it come the winter. On one occasion long-time resident Peter Francis had to remove 50 wheelbarrows full of possessions which one short-term resident had left behind after realising Tipi Valley wasn't for them. Rik says: 'Over the years we've had no end of people wanting to live here thinking it's their dream and then during a cold wet winter they've left and left all their stuff and it can be very difficult to sort out. 'It is challenging because it's quite a small space to live in and that means one cannot have many possessions. For example, when I was bringing my children up in a tipi there could only be one toy basket and when it was full one toy had to come out for a new one to go in. 'I actually found that very beneficial for my children. They didn't have a lot and I was amazed how unpossessive my kids were. When I was a child I was possessive because I had my bedroom to myself which was like my own little empire. 'What I am really pleased about, when I look at my whole life, is that my children were born and bred at Tipi Valley because the opportunity that afforded them was pretty unique - the opportunity to live in the wild and survive with basic means.' The majority of the residents of Tipi Valley now live in these round huts (Image: John Myers ) The electricity is solar powered, some of the food is grown on site in allotments, the toilets are compost loos, and the water comes from a well sourced by the stream (Image: John Myers ) Rik was persuaded to the valley in 1978 by a friend who had wanted him to start a school here. 'As soon as I came over the hill into the valley I knew I wanted to be here for the rest of my life,' he recalls. 'I didn't have any wanderlust to go all over the world or anything like that. I just wanted to find a place I could be freer and where I felt I belonged. I wanted to live close to nature and to bring my family up while living a life I could believe in more than I could believe in the civilisation we've got. Of course, we also need civilisation in part. We couldn't do without the NHS and roads.' He'd lived in many towns and cities across the UK including London, Manchester, Bournemouth and Southend by the time he reached Tipi Valley when he was 31. 'I find the idea of leaving here now just ludicrous,' he says. 'All my life I've just wanted to be around nature and to not have to feel that by crossing some fence I've trespassed into someone else's land. I was brought up on Rupert Bear who lived a wonderful life in the countryside where he could go pretty well wherever he liked. And that's what I wanted.' Peter, a former dairy farmer who has lived here since 1983, has built his fair share of huts. His current hut, with a reciprocal frame roof and an electric induction hob which runs entirely on solar energy, is comparative luxury considering what he's lived in at Tipi Valley before. Peter Francis has built his fair share of huts and says they're far more efficient than tipis or yurts (Image: John Myers ) Peter believes more people need to live in the way the residents of Tipi Valley do (Image: John Myers ) A short walk from his hut the 73-year-old has a sizable allotment where he grows his fruit and vegetables. He also grows his own coffee. 'It's about the philosophy of simplicity - that less is more,' he says. Although he agrees with Rik that he doesn't live by that motto when it comes to ice cream. 'Before living here I was down the road in Taliaris where I was a dairy farmer. It didn't all add up, being a dairy farmer. Small dairy farms even in the 1980s didn't pay and it was also during the time of mad cow disease. 'I used to say to my feed merchant in Llandeilo: 'Where are you getting this stuff from?' And he'd say: 'Quality stuff this is.' But it was actually dead cows I was feeding my cows on. No wonder the health problems were rife. It was all going wrong and I couldn't ever work out why. Only in retrospect did it all come out.' He was in a tipi briefly but found one hard to live in. 'I went and spent some time in Africa and came back with the idea of living in a thatched hut instead,' he says. 'I built my first hut entirely out of materials from the valley here apart from the nails. Unfortunately that one burnt down because I left a lamp burning while I was out.' He explains why Tipi Valley is no longer very Tipi. 'Nowadays a tipi costs maybe a couple of thousand pounds and with the canvas, under these conditions, you'd be lucky if it lasted three years. They're not very efficient. 'So although in the summer it's a wonderful experience to live in a tipi with the focus of the fire in the middle and being wonderfully close to being outside in nature, come the winter with the wind blowing through the door and the damp and dark, it can be difficult. 'The thing about these huts is the overhang on the roof which means the walls are dry. Yurts don't have that overhang so the walls are damp when it's raining and that means everything gets a bit damp.' A handful of residents at Tipi Valley still live in tipis (Image: John Myers ) The people of Tipi Valley believe we belong to the earth and the footprint of people on the earth should be as minimal as possible, hence the huts blend into the landscape and are eco-friendly (Image: John Myers ) He tells me the hut was very cheap to build - no more than £5,000. 'So nobody needs to be homeless,' he says. 'They just need to change the planning laws.' We are sitting in Peter's lounge area - although the hut isn't separated into rooms. It's more of a roundhouse with a kitchen area, a bed and all manner of plants. There are no corners, Peter points out proudly, so as to remove the temptation to have too much 'stuff'. There is no television but there are a few books. Article continues below 'I've not had a television since I was a boy,' he laughs. 'I prefer looking out of the window.' He's spoiled for choice here, having surrounded the hut with windows and doors which open up to create the sort of summerhouse which would sell for hundreds of pounds a week on Airbnb. 'It's funny isn't it,' he says. 'When I first came here we were considered a strange sort - beyond the pale. Wider society just didn't get us. And yet now it's become desirable. People say: 'Let's go glamping and stay in a turf-roofed hut and pay a grand a week.' 'What they didn't know then is that this life is actually normal. It's the urban, modern way of life which isn't normal, and the sooner people start downsizing the better. Otherwise we don't have a future because the way climate change is going at the moment, it isn't looking good at all.' Rik adds: 'So what you've got to do is go back to Cardiff, get a tent and go and live in the park.'