sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2014-07-17 09:49 pm

The broken oar and the gear of foreign dead men

So I feel like I owe writeups of several things, including Readercon and the movie I saw last night, but what you're getting right now is a list of different movies altogether. Over dinner tonight, [livejournal.com profile] derspatchel and I were pipe-dreaming the program for a festival of maritime film. (I don't even remember. I think we were talking about John Ford.) Inevitably, it's kind of a list of our favorites. So far we agree on—

Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), dir. Frank Lloyd

Captain Blood (1935), dir. Michael Curtiz

Captains Courageous (1937), dir. Victor Fleming1

The Long Voyage Home (1940), dir. John Ford

The Cruel Sea (1953), dir. Charles Frend

The Caine Mutiny (1954), dir. Edward Dmytryk

Moby Dick (1956), dir. John Huston

The Secret of Roan Inish (1994), dir. John Sayles

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), dir. Gore Verbinski2

Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003), dir. Peter Weir

We very regretfully did not include either 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) or Treasure Island (1950), although James Mason and Robert Newton are deservedly classic and inimitable in each.3 I am uncertain whether A Night to Remember (1958) counts as maritime film or just a disaster movie that occurs aboard a ship, albeit a wrenching and excellent example of the form. (You will notice Cameron's Titanic (1997) is not on this list.) I am also not sure I can count Splash (1984), formative sea-movie of mine though it is, and I know I can't count Pacific Rim (2013), although somehow it feels like one should. There are no documentaries; there should be some. Some more recent films couldn't hurt. And something non-American. Also it has not escaped my notice that this list of directors is kind of a dickfest and I cannot believe women never make movies about the sea. Tell me what we're missing!

1. If, as my husband stipulates, the audience remembers that the very last lines are terrible.

2. The first movie remains the best example of swashbuckling I have seen since Errol Flynn. I love so much about the second and third, but they are so wildly inconsistent I cannot in good conscience include them. Davy Jones and the Flying Dutchman and Calypso/Tia Dalma: fantastic. Elizabeth Swann coming into her piracy: could've used more, but that's why we have fanfic. The cannibal island and whatever the hell was going on with Singapore: naaarp.

3. Newton's Long John Silver is extremely imitable, but that is part of his glory.

[identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com 2014-07-18 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
Hmm. The long-drowned patriot in me wants to advocate for In Which We Serve, and also for The Yangtze Incident (possibly the first movie I went to see without either parent in tow; it was a birthday treat, in a bizarre double bill with one of the St Trinians movies, and I forgot my then-very-new glasses and had to watch the whole of the first film in a blur, until my dad came hurrying down the aisle with my specs and Alistair Sym leaped suddenly into focus). The first of course is about a ship being sunk, and the second is about a ship being stranded mid-river and having to retreat: both continuing that splendid British tradition of finding triumph in defeat.

I might also want to make a case for The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou or possibly The Boat That Rocked, just because frankly this list could use a giggle.

[identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com 2014-07-18 05:38 am (UTC)(link)
I liked The Boat That Rocked enough to watch it on a transatlantic flight and then buy the DVD. It's very much an ensemble piece, and if you like that ensemble, you're going to like the movie. And then I also came of age in the time of pirate radio ships, so.

[identity profile] desperance.livejournal.com 2014-07-18 05:41 am (UTC)(link)
Yup, I loved The Battle of the River Plate also. Basically, give me big ships beating shit out of each other, I'm happy.