This list grew out of an
experience I had several years ago while surfing nautical sites. I went to what
purported to be a list of nautical movies, and there I found listed 4 or 5
documentaries, a couple of WWII submarine movies, and about a half a dozen
sailing movies. Well, I own more sailing movies than that, so I thought I'd
type up a list of the movies I knew about and e-mail it to this person. It just
got out of hand. The list kept getting longer, friends started giving me
suggestions, I started adding comments about the movies I really liked, and
then
Originally, I thought I was building a video
rental guide. However, I have found that a lot of movies I'd like to see are
not available, or are out of print. As a
matter of fact, in the eight years I've been doing this list, I've seen a
number of movies go out of print. I've noted this, as copies can be found
at some sites that sell used movies. I'm hoping that these movies are
being brought out once again on DVD. The proliferation of cable channels
means that a lot of these movies get broadcast once in a while, so I've noted
which ones are available (and which format), and the rest, well, check your
local listings.
My Criteria: The movies on this list have something to do with sailing
(there are two exceptions, one notable - The African Queen, the other
whimsical - The Wind in the Willows), whether it be yachts or tall
ships, modern or historical. I have tried to include not only the movies about
sailing, but also any movie where sailing, or sailboats, play a significant role
in the movie. This can be very arbitrary. For example,
The great thing about these old swashbucklers is that the violence is nowhere near the level of today's films, there's no gore, and the sex is, at most, implied. These are the kind of films you can throw in the VCR at Thanksgiving (after the games are over) when you have the little kids and Grandma in the room.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ratings: I've only rated movies that I've seen recently enough to remember something about.
I have to explain something here,
***** The Classics! Classics in every sense of the word! The stories, acting, and production values would put these movies near the top of any movie list. If you're going to own movies, these are a must. Of the 14 movies I've given 5 stars to, only 2 of them (The Bounty and White Squall) are not based on classic literature, or written by noteworthy authors.
**** The Great Ones. These are movies that I consider great within the genre. Once is not enough for these: the story, acting, and sailing are enjoyable enough to watch again and again.
*** The Good Ones. All these movies are worth seeing at least once, and some of them have a cult following. (Cabin Boy springs immediately to mind.) This is the category that I get the most argument about.
** The Bad Ones. Flawed, but possibly worth renting, if you can find them and happen to be bedridden for some reason. Or if you happen to be a fan of a particular actor/actress. There are a couple of movies that are included here only because there are much better versions available.
*
The Ugly Ones Don’t waste your time.
Seriously, folks, the
movies to which I've given one star aren't even bad enough to be funny.
No entertainment value at all.
Caveat: The criteria for inclusion, the ratings, and my comments are all my
personal opinions. You can e-mail me your opinions and suggestions. Whether or
not I make use of them (this is, after all, my list), will depend on how
valid I think they are, and how civilly they are offered.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1993 Made-for-TV imitation of
Dead Calm, with Kate Jackson. Very lame. It cost me $1.07 to rent this,
and it was still too much.
Available VHS (out of print)
1945
Available
VHS (out of print)
Adventures in
1959 - 1962 Classic TV series starring
Gardner MacKay, and a schooner named the Tiki.
Developed by James A. Michener from his books of the same title, and sold to
20th Century Fox. This is the only American TV show - to my knowledge -
built around a sailing ship, and it is the series that started a lot of
‘boomers’ dreaming about sailing off to a life of adventure in the
South Seas. It's certainly what first attracted me to schooners, traditional
sail, and wooden boats. At 12 years old I made two abortive attempts to
run away to join Captain Troy in
Available
DVD
1951 Errol Flynn, Vincent
Price, Agnes Moorehead. Dashing sea captain
comes to the aid of a lovely lady. This is the least likable of Flynn's
four seagoing dramas, a low budget disappointment to all but the most ardent
fans of Errol Flynn. This is at the opposite end of the spectrum from Captain
Blood - both in terms of his career, and in entertainment value. In
1951 Flynn was up to his ears in trouble, facing statutory rape charges in the
Available VHS (out of print)
The
Adventures of Long John Silver
1955 (TV) Robert
Available
DVD,VHS Reviewed
by Blackhawk
1951 The classic Bogart - Hepburn vehicle. It's not sailing, but it is a
wonderful small-boat adventure story. Based on the novel by C.S. Forester (of
Horatio Hornblower fame), written by James Agee and
John Huston, directed by John Huston. Also starring Robert
Morley. Oscar nominations for Best Screenplay (Agee
& Huston), Best Actress (Hepburn), and Best Director (Huston).
Bogart won the Oscar for Best Actor. Rated by the IMDb viewers as the 56th best movie of all time.
Available DVD, VHS, (A special edition LaserDisc
was released in 1993 that included Hepburn's book about the movie, and a
printed copy of the shooting script).
1977 A
made-for-TV remake, starring Warren Oates & Mariette
Hartley, that is thankfully;
Not available
1952 Errol Flynn, Maureen
O'Hara, Anthony Quinn. Set in the 1700s, Royal Navy versus the pirate republic
in
Available VHS (out of print) Available in
a 4 movie DVD set that includes Buccaneer's Girl / Yankee
Buccaneer / Double Crossbones
1953
Robert Taylor, Stewart Granger. Sea-faring saga
of two brothers and the woman they both love, involved in pearl diving and
mutiny in the South Pacific islands
Available
VHS (out of print) reviewed by Blackhawk
1997
Morgan Freeman, Anthony Hopkins, Mathew MacConaughey,
Pete Postlethwaite. Directed
by Steven Spielberg. Fact-based story of the
1839 revolt aboard a Spanish slave schooner, and the subsequent legal battle
over the status of the slaves when the vessel took refuge in the
Available
DVD, VHS
1991 TV mini series
based on a true story of murder in the south seas, and
the subsequent trial. I have not seen
this, but what I’ve read leads me to believe that it’s primarily a
court room drama about sailors.
I’m not at all sure how much sailing is actually shown in the
movie. According to the message boards
on the IMDb, this movie gets shown a lot.
Not
Available
Anne of the
Indies
1951 Jean Peters,
Louis Jordan, Debra Paget. A woman pirate tries to find love while
maintaining command of her crew. Haven’t seen this yet but it sounds like it could be a fun
movie.
Available in
review
provided by Blackhawk
1990
Made-for-TV. Based on Elmo Wortman’s
book, "Almost Too Late." A
true story of a man and his three children shipwrecked while winter sailing in
southeastern
Not available
1962 Written, directed,
produced by, and starring, Peter Ustinov. Also starring
Terence Stamp (in the title role), Robert Ryan, and David McCallum.
Based on the Herman Melville novel, the story chronicles the harsh, brutal
conditions in the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic wars. An
Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor (Terence Stamp).
Available DVD, VHS (out of print) Also available in a54 movies DVD set that includes M
1926 Douglas Fairbanks, Billie Dove. Seeking revenge, an athletic young man joins
the pirate band responsible for his father’s death.
Available
DVD, VHS Reviewed
by Blackhawk
1942 Pirate
epic with Tyrone Power, Maureen O'Hara, George Sanders, Laird Cregar, and Anthony Quinn. Based on the Rafael Sabatini
novel, it's very entertaining; my boys loved it. It will seem dated in most
respects, although there is a scene in the beginning where the pirate captains,
Tyrone and Sanders, have some captive women tied up, that I found somewhat
lascivious, and which provoked the comment from my then 13-year-old
"there's the best reason for becoming a pirate!" Appears
to have been filmed with sets and models. Oscar
nominations for Best Special Effects, and Best Score, winner for Best
Cinematography-Color.
Available DVD,VHS
1952 Robert
Available VHS (out of print)DVD region 2 (
1953 Alan Ladd, James Mason,
directed by John Farrow. Based on the Hall and Nordhoff book.
Available VHS (out of print)
Three versions of the story of Jean Lafitte have been filmed. Interestingly, there's quite a connection between the 1938 and 1958 versions. Cecil B. DeMille directed the '38 version, and was executive producer for the '58. Anthony Quinn starred in the '38, and directed the '58 (his only directorial effort). Both versions are based on the novel by Lyle Saxon. The '38 screenwriters, Harold Lamb, Jeanie MacPherson, E.J. Mayer, and C.G. Sullivan are credited on the '58 version (with the addition of B.Mosk and J. Lasskey).
1938 Directed by Cecil B. DeMille,
Fredric March in the title role, with Anthony Quinn, Walter Brennan, Hugh Sothern, and Margot Grahame. Oscar nomination for Best Cinematography.
Not available
1950 The
Last of the Buccaneers, with Paul Henreid as
Lafitte
Not available
1958 *** Directed by Anthony Quinn; Yul
Brynner as Lafitte, Charlton Heston
as Andrew Jackson, with Claire Bloom, Charles Boyer, Inger
Stevens, E.G. Marshall, and Lorne Greene. Oscar nomination
for Best Costumes. Like the Disney version of Kidnapped,
this movie baffles me. With this cast, and a true story in which a couple
of rogues like Lafitte and Jackson cross paths, you'd think they would have
made a rousing swashbuckler. But you'd be wrong. It's dull, and
stilted, and slow moving. And the two principal characters are portrayed
as so respectable that you'd be hard-pressed to believe that Lafitte was a
pirate, and that
Available VHS (out of print)
The Buccaneers
1956
(TV) Robert Shaw, Alec Clunes, George Margo. Dan Tempest (Shaw) was a pirate until
pardoned by the King. He becomes a
privateer and works with the the Crown-appointed
deputy governor to fight the Spanish privateers who are ravaging the
Available
VHS (out of print)
reviewed by Blackhawk
1950 Pirate
adventure/comedy. Directed by
Frederic De Cordova, Yvonne De Carlo, Phillip Friend, Robert
Douglas.
Available in a 4 movie DVD set that
includes Against All Flags / Yankee Buccaneer / Double Crossbones
1994 Chris
Elliott, Ritch Brinkley, James Gammon. Written by Chris Elliott. I
know, I know, it's silly and it's filmed entirely on a set, but they're at
least pretending to be sailing, and it does have some funny bits in it. It
starts off as a parody of Captains Courageous, but then sails off into
the
Available DVD, VHS.
1935 Errol Flynn, Olivia de
Havilland, Basil Rathbone. The movie that defined
Available DVD, VHS
This film spawned a couple of sequels, and one remake.
1950
Fortunes of Captain Blood.
Louis Hayward , sequel to Captain Blood. Probably the only time in
1952 Captain
Pirate (
Fortunes of Captain Blood and Captain Pirate are available as a DVD boxed set
1960
Le Capitan. A French
version
Not available
1962
Son of Captain Blood. Italian version, starring Errol Flynn's 21-year-old son Sean, as
the son of Captain Blood. One of six films Sean Flynn made before
turning to a career in journalism. In 1970 Flynn — a photojournalist working for
Time magazine — and a friend sped off on motorbikes to cover the front
lines in
Not available
1951
Gregory Peck in the title role, with Virginia Mayo as the love interest. Based on the novel by C.S.
Forester. A very entertaining swashbuckler! If the plot seems familiar to
today's readers of Patrick O'Brian novels, it's because both Forester and
O'Brian used the real life exploits of Thomas Cochrane on which to model their
heroes.
Available DVD,VHS(out
of print)
1999 A pleasant
little movie inspired by true events.
Bob Hoskins plays a loveable rogue, who sets to sea headed for the
Available DVD
Captain
James Cook
1987
Made-for-TV miniseries (
Not
available
1945
Charles Laughton in the title role, with Randolph
Scott, Barbara Britton, and John Carradine. Historically inaccurate account of
Capt. Kidd. Oscar nomination for Best Score.
Available DVD, VHS
This really isn't a sequel, but for obvious reasons I felt compelled to include it here.
1952 Abbott &
Costello Meet Captain Kidd. Charles Laughton
reprising his role as Capt Kidd, kidnapping Bud and Lou who are in possession
of a treasure map. They manage to involve Anne Bonney
and Henry Morgan.
Not available
1992 Kurt Russell,
Martin Short and Mary Kay Place in a funny and entertaining tale of Ozzie and
Harriet meet the last pirate of the Caribbean. Lightweight,
but fun. The sailing is, for the most part, genuine.
Available
DVD, VHS
1949 AKA I Pitari de Capri (Italian title), Pirates of Capri (the
original US release title), and The Masked Pirate (
Available DVD
Three versions of Rudyard Kipling's classic:
1937 ***** Spencer
Tracy, Lionel Barrymore, Freddie Bartholomew, Mickey Rooney, Melvyn Douglas and
John Carradine. Well-adapted from Rudyard Kipling's great story, and well-acted, this
is an excellent picture in all regards. The only negative thing I can say is
that Freddie Bartholomew was too young to play Harvey Cheyne
(Hollywood's usual habit of portraying teenage characters as cute, precocious
10-year-olds). On the plus side they filmed this using real Gloucester fishing
schooners, and what looked like footage of actual fisherman. There are a couple
of scenes that were almost certainly shot on a set, but they did an excellent
job blending them into actual footage shot on the deck and interior of the real
thing. The scenes of the schooners under sail are by themselves worth the price
of admission. Oscar nominations for Best Screenplay, Best
Editing and Best Picture. Spencer Tracy won the Oscar for Best Actor. My
boys (14 and 11 at the time) rated this right up there with Moby Dick, Sea
Wolf and Treasure Island.
Available DVD, VHS
1977 Made-for-TV. Karl Malden,
Fred Gwynn, Ricardo Montalban,
Fritz Weaver.
Not available
1996 Made-for-TV. Robert Urich. I've read that Kenny Vadas
did the best Harvey Cheyne of of
all the versions.
Available VHS
Four versions of the Christopher Columbus story:
1949 Fredric
March in the title role.
Not available
1985 Made-for-TV. Gabriel Byrne as
Available VHS (out of print)
1992 The
Discovery.
One of two done for the quincentennial.
Georges Corraface as
Available VHS
1992 1492-The Conquest of
Available DVD, VHS (DVD, VHS out of
print)
1952 Burt
Lancaster and Nick Cravat. Burt
does a very good Errol Flynn. An enjoyable, although dated, pirate film that
the kids loved. Very tongue in cheek, with a lot of beefcake, the fans of the
young
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out
of print)
1995 Geena Davis, Matthew Modine and
Frank Langella. Made by Renny Harlin,
the director of Die Hard (and Geena Davis'
then-husband), there's lots of action and explosions; some not very believable
ships and sailing sequences, and the coast of Thailand passing as the
Caribbean. Davis has the physical size to be believable brawling and swordfighting, and Modine in his
second "sailing" movie tried hard to be swashbuckling, but needed a
better-written role. The only redeeming feature of this movie was Frank Langella hamming it up as the "bad" pirate.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1962 AKA HMS Defiant (
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1989 Nicole
Kidman, Sam Neill, Billy Zane, a gorgeous 60 ft ketch, and a dying schooner. An intense thriller that will
keep you on the edge of your seat. It has only one negative, and
that's the way it ended. Other than that, it's a great movie, skillfully
directed to keep the blood pounding, even after repeated viewings. And
it's a wonderful sailing movie! Except for the first ten minutes, it
takes place entirely at sea, and was in fact shot in the Whitsunday Passage in
Australia. The boat handling looked real and the way the two characters
handle the challenges presented them are very believable. As in The
Riddle of the Sands, the difficulty of navigating under adverse conditions
was utilized perfectly to heighten the tension, and to make it a more
believable sailing film. This movie, in my opinion, is runner-up to White
Squall and The Bounty as the best sailing movie not based on classic
literature, and is sitting on the fence for that 5th star.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1993
Made-for-TV. Mel Harris, John
Schneider. I can find no info on this.
Not available
1974 Based
on Robin Graham's true story of sailing alone around the world at age 15. Joseph Bottoms, Deborah Raffin. Bottoms was
nominated for a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer.
Available VHS (out of print)
1951 An oddball comedy pirate movie starring Donald
O’Conner as a pirate by mistake, singing and dancing his way out of
trouble, and into the heart of his true love.
I read on the IMDb that Donald O’Conner
thought this was the worst movie he made.
I’ll defer to his judgement. There’s nothing here even for the most
devoted O’Conner fan.
There’s only one song & dance, and the song was horrible.
Available
in a 4 movie DVD set that includes Against All
Flags, Buccaneer's Girl, and Yankee
Buccaneer
1949 Lionel Barrymore, Dean Stockwell, Richard Widmark. I know little of this movie, other than
it’s about whaling, and reportedly a decent
enough film.
Not
Available (although there are people who claim to have
a VHS tape)
1980
Made-for-TV miniseries (
Not
available
1989
Written, directed by, and starring Monty Python's Terry Jones. Also starring Tim Robbins, John Cleese, Freddie Jones, and bit parts by Mickey Rooney, Eartha Kitt, and Tsutomu Sekine. Viking saga ala Monty
Python. Very silly in spots, but surprisingly
entertaining with more story than I would have thought. Monty
Python fans will rate this movie a lot higher.
Available DVD, VHS (DVD, VHS out of print)
1953 Burt
Lancaster. Based
on a true story. Not a bad movie
for Burt fans, but very dated.
There’s a minimum amount of sailing, and little regard for
historical accuracy.
Available DVD,VHS
1965
Anthony Quinn and James Coburn in a tale of the last days of
Available
DVD
1999 The TV
adaptation of C.S. Forester's classic Napoleonic war saga. The critics
gave it mixed reviews, for which they should be flogged. Well written,
superbly acted, with lots of actual sailing aboard real tall ships. Ioan Gruffydd deserves special
note for his portrayal of young Hornblower as he
blossoms from raw cadet into an experienced and confident naval officer.
They used two actual tall ships in this production, the Grand Turk, in the
role of all the frigates, but especially as Indefatigable, and the
Baltic trading schooner Julia, as all the smaller vessels. They
used 11 scale models for the battle scenes. These models weighed 3,000
lbs each, and had working rigging and cannons that fired by remote control.
Episode 1: The Even Chance
Episode 2: The Examination For Lieutenant
Episode 3: The Duchess and the Devil
Episode 4: The
Frogs and Lobsters
2001
Episode 5: Mutiny
Episode 6: Retribution
2003
Episode 7: Loyalty
Episode 8: Duty
Available
DVD, VHS
1968 Yes,
that really is the title. A 1968 comedy with
Gardner McKay of Adventures in Paradise fame.
Not available
1963 The film version of the
legend of the golden fleece. With
Todd Armstrong and Nancy Kovak. Special effects by Ray Harryhausen.
Available DVD, VHS
1958 Robert
Stack as the short, slight, sandyhaired Scotsman? Oh well. Bette Davis, Peter Cushing
and Mia Farrow. Directed by John Farrow (Mia's
father).
Available VHS
One of the two Robert Louis Stevenson novels that has been a perennial favorite of movie makers; nine versions have been made to date, the last three TV movies or mini series. The only version currently available appears to be the Master Piece Theater version from 2005.
1917 silent
1938 Freddie Bartholomew, John Carradine
1948 Roddy McDowell, Dan O'Herlihy
1960 *** Disney version. Peter Finch, James MacArthur, Peter
O'Toole. It has an excellent cast, (although I think that MacArthur is the weak link as Balfour) and a script that
stuck closely to RLS's story, but
I've never particularly liked this version. It seems dull, and
that shouldn't be, this is an exciting adventure story. I have a copy of
this, because I got it cheap and none of the other versions are
available. This should be in the classics, but in truth I can't even give
it a four star rating.
Available VHS (out of print)
1971 Michael Caine, Trevor Howard. I've only seen two versions of this movie, this one and the Disney version. It's been a long time since I've seen this, but I have much fonder memories of this one, although that could be because I'm a big Michael Caine fan.
1978 Made-for-TV (German)
1995***** Made-for-TV (
Available
DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
2005 **Made for
TV (MasterPiece Theater) It’s not often MasterPiece Theater disappoints me, but they managed to
with this one. I thought the pacing of
the film was dreadful – why all the scenes of clouds
being blown across the sky? I
wasn’t impressed with any of the acting.
Available
DVD
1967 Remake
of Against All Flags. Doug
McClure, Jill St. John.
Not available
1962
Polish film, directed by Roman Polanski. An
interesting psycho-drama, this was the first Polish film to be nominated for a
Foreign Language Oscar. It forms part of
a loose trilogy of Polanski films (with Cul-de-Sac
(1966) and Death and the
Maiden (1994)), based around a psychological ménage-à-trois. All three films feature a couple whose lives are
turned upside down by an outside character.
In this case it’s a successful middle aged man and his younger
wife picking up a young hitchhiker and taking him along on a weekend sailing
trip. It’s an interesting story,
well worth seeing apart from the sailing.
And I loved the sailing aspect of it!
Except for the first 10 minutes, and the last two, the movie takes place
entirely aboard the boat. It’s a
beautiful little wooden sloop, 30’-35’, sailing on some
undetermined waterways (lakes, canals, possibly a river), somewhere in
Available
DVD, VHS
1948
Film noir.
Rita Hayworth, Orson Welles, and a
fateful yacht trip. An offbeat, cerebral thriller that is somewhat
predictable at times. Filmed aboard Errol Flynn's Yacht Zaca. Directed by Orson Welles.
Available
DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1950 The story of
what happened to Lafitte after the Battle of New Orleans. It involves piracy (against the Spanish),
treasure, brushes with the American law, and beautiful women. Starring Paul Henreid as Lafitte.
Not
Available
1944 An extraordinary tale of
survival at sea in a small boat. Written by John Steinbeck,
directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and featuring compelling character portraits by a
great cast, including Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix, Walter Slezak, Mary
Anderson, and Hume Cronyn. Oscar nominations for Best
Director (Hitchcock), Best Screenplay (Steinbeck), and Best Cinematography. Made during WWII, it’s the story of the
survivors of a battle between a
Available DVD, VHS
2000
Made-for-TV miniseries (
Available
DVD Reviewed by Blackhawk
1963 Viking
saga with Richard Widmark, Sidney Poitier.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1986 Based on
the Thomas Thompson book, the true story of what happens when you go to sea
with religious fanatics. I’ve seen this only once, 20 years ago,
but I remember this as a very good, if disturbing film.
Not available
1975 Comedy with Burt Reynolds, Gene Hackman, Liza Minelli, Robbie Benson, John Hillerman and a yacht named Lucky Lady. Prohibition rumrunners. Reported to have been quite forgettable (although Liza was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a comedy). This movie sticks in my mind because if I remember correctly, they gave away the sailboat as a promotion for the movie (and I think Lucky Strike cigarettes had something to do with it - but I'm not positive). Anyway, I didn't win it, and had to wait 20 more years to get a large wooden sailboat.
I saw this movie recently for the first time,
broadcast on the Fox Movie Channel, and I have to say that I liked it.
There was actually quite a bit of sailing in the movie, and Burt, Liza and Gene looked like they were having fun making
it. It's low comedy, predictable, and lame in a couple of spots, but it's
really very enjoyable. I'd put it somewhere on the scale between Captain
Ron and Summer Rental.
Not available
The
Man Without a Country***
1973 Made-for-TV. Cliff Robertson,
2003 Based on the
Patrick O’Brien books, Screen play and direction by Peter Weir, starring
Russell Crowe as Capt. “Lucky” Jack Aubrey. The movie starts and ends with the sound of
the wind, and is quite simply the best movie ever made about the age of
fighting sail. They managed to make this
as historically accurate as
Available
DVD, VHS
The
Master of Ballantrae***
1953 Errol Flynn,
Robert Livesey.
Robert Louis Stevenson’s historical tale of a
minor
Available
DVD Reviewed by Blackhawk
1999 An excellent, thoroughly
enjoyable movie, it amazes me that this did not do better at the box office.
Kevin Costner, Paul Newman, and Robin Wright Penn all gave strong performances
in this very touching love story, which is nowhere near as sappy as some
reviewers would have you believe. The Kevin Costner character is a boat
builder and sailor, and the boats and sailing sequences are a joy! I
highly recommend this movie.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1988 Faye
Dunaway, Daniel J. Travanti, Kim Cattrall,
John Laughlin, and Ned Beatty. An attempt at film noir that failed. The sailboat's nice,
there’s actually quite a bit of sailing, and Kim Cattrall's
assets are nicely displayed at every opportunity. But the story is very weak and the acting is
uninspired. Travanti,
trying to move up from the small screen, seems over his head. As for Dunaway, Cattrall
and Beatty, it’s a colossal waste of some “A” list talent.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
Three versions of the Melville classic have been filmed.
1930 John Barrymore as Captain Ahab. I've never seen this, but I've yet to read a favorable comment
from those who have. Evidently some scriptwriter was under the mistaken
impression that he could write a better story than Melville, as they made major
changes to the story.
Not available
1956 ***** Gregory
Peck as Captain Ahab, with Orson Welles, Harry
Andrews, and Richard Basehart. Screenplay by Ray Bradbury and John
Huston. Directed by John Huston. The movie is
faithful to Melville's story, and much of it was shot aboard an actual ship,
and in small whaleboats. It appeared as though footage of actual whaling was
used in some of the sequences (this was, after all, 1956), and where models
were used, it's not obvious, except for the rubber white whale. Gregory Peck
was superb as Ahab, although he reportedly thought himself too young for the
role.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1998 **
Made-for-TV. Starring
Patrick Stewart, with Gregory Peck in a supporting role. Directed by Franc Roddam, who also had a
hand in writing the script and producing this. All of which proves
that Franc Roddam is no John Huston. For me
personally, this was one of the most anxiously awaited,
and ultimately disappointing films I can remember. And to spoil it
even more for me, shortly before this was broadcast, I read an article that
detailed how this was filmed entirely on a
set. They constructed a giant tank, and built a "ship" on
it. Bah, humbug! A waste of some great actors and
a wonderful story.
Available DVD, VHS (DVD, VHS out of print)
Mutiny**
1952 Mark Stevens,
Angela Lansbury, Patric
Knowles. Early in the War of 1812,
Captain James Marshall is commissioned to run the British blockade and fetch an
unofficial war loan from
Available
DVD, VHS (curiously, the DVD is OOP but the VHS is still available)
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
I have found four versions of Mutiny on the Bounty. Again, I'll list them by the year:
1933 In the
Wake of the Bounty. All I know
about this one is that Errol Flynn played Fletcher Christian. According to Flynn's
autobiography, he was working as a schooner captain/goldminer/conman
in
*Note: I've had readers question the truthfulness of this
account. And given Flynn's penchant for hyperbolic self-promotion, I
wouldn't doubt that Flynn may have stretched the truth a tad.
Not Available
1935 Starred
Charles Laughton as Bligh, Clark Gable as Fletcher
Christian, and Franchot Tone. I've only seen bits and
pieces of this one. Oscar nominations for Best Score, Best Screenplay, Best
Director and the Oscar winner for Best Picture. Laughton,
Gable and Tone were all nominated for Best Actor, which Tone won.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1963 Starred
Marlon Brando as Fletcher Christian, Trevor Howard as
Bligh, and Richard Harris. Following in the footsteps of the '35 version, this
was also nominated for 7 Academy awards, Best Picture, Best Art Director, Best
Special Effects, Best Score, Best Song, Best Editing, and Best Cinematography.
Available VHS (out of print)
1984 The
Bounty ***** The 4th
version was made in 1984 and starred Anthony Hopkins as Bligh, Mel Gibson as Fletcher
Christian, Sir Laurence Olivier as Admiral Hood, and Daniel Day-Lewis and Liam Neeson in strong supporting roles. Considered by most
critics to be revisionist, as it does not follow the popular American line on
Bligh, it actually comes quite close to the truth in capturing the
personalities of the two principals, and their complex relationship. The three
previous movies about this historical incident are based on the Hall and Nordhoff books Mutiny on the Bounty, while this
movie was based on Richard Hough's book Captain Bligh and Mr. Christian.
Hopkins, Gibson, Day-Lewis, and Neeson were superb. I
highly recommend this.
Available DVD, VHS.
2005
Made-for-TV miniseries. Kyle MacLachlan, Danielle Calvert, Gabrielle
Anwar, Patrick Stewart, Jason Durr,
Omar Gooding. A considerably darker take
on Jules Verne’s novel than the 1961 movie that featured Ray Harryhausen's special effects, this version makes the
pirates much more significant characters than either the novel or the earlier movie. The pirates actually have names and
individual personalities and more lines than a simple “aaargh”.
Several lengthy scenes are shot on a Chinese junk, the pirates’
ship which is appropriate since, apparently, the mysterious island is right off
the coast of
Available
DVD Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1983 The British title was
Available DVD, VHS (out of print)
1924 Buster Keaton, Kathryn McGuire.
A rich, rather naïve young man is set adrift aboard a large, derelict
sailing ship, unaware that his estranged true love is also aboard.
They manage to miss each other in comic ways but are finally joined and must
work together to survive storms and attacks by cannibals.
Available
DVD
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1978 Viking
saga with Lee Majors.
Available VHS (out of print)
1996 Big
budget TV miniseries. Armande Assante, Greta Scacchi, Geraldine Chaplin, Christopher Lee, Irene Pappas,
Bernadette Peters, Eric Roberts, Isabella Rosselini,
Vanessa Williams. This is as good as TV
gets. An excellent
adaptation of a classic story. A
Golden Globe and an Emmy nomination for Best Mini Series; Emmys for Best
Special Effects, Best Direction; Assante won a Golden
Globe for Best Actor.
Available DVD, VHS (DVD, VHS out of print)
1926
Charles Farrell, George Bancroft, Wallace Beery, Esther Ralston. Several sailors and a damsel in distress are
involved in defeat of the Barbary pirates in
Available
VHS (out of print)
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1958 *****
Hemingway's classic tale of the sea, wonderfully done for the big screen. Oscar nominations for Best
Cinematography and Best Actor (Tracy), Oscar winner for Best Score.
Available DVD, VHS
1990
Made-for-TV (
Available DVD, VHS
1999 Animated
short. A joint Russian/Canadian film
shot in Imax format.
The film won practically every award for best animated short film that
year, including the Oscar. Reviewers
have described it as “stunning”.
Not
available (it was only shown in Imax theaters)
1986 John Cusak, Demi Moore, Curtis Armstrong, Joe Flaherty, Bob Goldthwait. A teen romance that’s supposed to be better then most. According to what I’ve read, at one
point the teens construct a sloop, and race in a regatta.
Available
DVD, VHS
1971
TV series. Peter Gilmore, Tom Adams, Jessica Benton,
Jane Seymour. A British series about rival ship lines in the
1860’s that has been described as “one third sea adventure and two
thirds high-class Victorian soap opera.”
The series does an excellent job of combining the Upstairs, Downstairs
sort of drama with a substantial dose of believable nautical action, most of it
filmed aboard several tall ships with a few early steamships thrown in to
reflect how maritime technology was changing in that period. One episode even involves James Onedin running the Union blockade of a Confederate port to
make an enormous profit on his cargo. Highly recommended.
Available
DVD
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1986 Written and directed by
Roman Polanski, starring Walter Matthau and a bunch
of Europeans. Comedy about pirates that was a box office
flop, panned by the critics. Although it did get an
Oscar nomination for Best Costume Design. They reportedly spent
half of their $30 million budget on building the ship.
Available VHS (out of print)It appears to be available on region 4 DVD
1958 Gérard Landry,Mijanou
Bardot. When
pirates kill the former ruler of Montefore, his
daughter seeks help from Captain Richard of the Black Hawk.
Available
DVD
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1961
Ken Scott, Letícia Román. At the commission of
Available
DVD
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1944 Bob Hope as a
coward, rescuing a princess - Virginia Mayo – kidnapped by pirates. Also starring Walter Brennan, Walter Slezak, and Victor McLaglen
Available
DVD,VHS
1942 John Wayne, battling
Available DVD, VHS
1979 Simply the all-time best
small-boat sailing/adventure movie! The movie manages to capture the spirit and
ambiance of Erskine Childers' 1903 novel, and, with
the exception of deleting the Baltic sequences, and the character of Capt.
Bartels, remained remarkably faithful to the book. Simon MacCorkindale
and Michael York are perfect as Davies and Carruthers,
and are well supported by a superb cast, including Jenny Agutter,
Jurgen Andersen, and Alan Badel.
All the elements that made the book a classic are here. A
must-see for all sailors.
Available VHS (out of print) Available on
DVD in
1940 Laurel
and Hardy comedy. The two take a
long sea voyage to calm Oliver's nerves, but of course things don't work out
the way Oliver would like them to.
Available VHS (out of print)
The Sailor from
1967 English psychodrama. Jeanne Moreau, Orson Welles,
Venessa Redgrave, Ian Bannon and John Hurt sailing around the Mediterranean.
Not Available
1940 ****Errol Flynn,
Brenda Marshall, Claude Rains, Donald Crisp, and Alan Hale, Sr. This picture
was based on Sir Francis Drake, and the English "seadogs." While the
movie plays fast and loose with the details of history, it is an entertaining
swashbuckler. The movie covers the early "seadog" years, and ends
just as preparations are being made to meet the Spanish Armada. This was kind
of a disappointing place to end an otherwise very likable movie. Oscar nominations for Best Art Direction, Best Special Effects,
Best Score and Best Sound.
Available DVD ,VHS, original blk & wht, and colorized
version
1924 *** (silent) Milton Sills, Enid Bennet, Lloyd Hughes, Wallace MacDonald. The adventures of Oliver Tressilian,
who goes from English gentry to galley slave to captain of a Moorish fighting
ship, is a more faithful adaptation of the Rafael Sabatini
novel than the 1940 Errol Flynn movie of the same name. The rousing sea battles were done with
full-sized ships, not models, creating a sense of reality and providing stock
footage for other movies for years.
Not
available
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1953 Rock
Hudson, Yvonne de Carlo. Based on Victor Hugo's novel Toilers of the Sea, a tale of
Available VHS (out of print) available on
DVD in region 2 (
1978 Robert
Logan. A man and his daughters set
off from
Available VHS
At least eight versions of the Jack London classic:
1911 Silent
1920 Silent
1926 Silent
1930 First talking version
I have no other info on the above, except that they're all Not available.
1941
Sea Wolf ** Edward G. Robinson
as Wolf Larson, Alexander Knox as Humphries; with Ida Lupino
and John Garfield. I didn't like
this version, and I'm not sure why, except that to me they made the story seem
contrived, and the whole thing looked like it was shot on sets. And since they
got the Oscar for Best Special Effects, I'm probably right.
Not available (VHS out of print)
1958
Wolf Larson. Barry Sullivan, Peter Graves. Maltin reports this as "nicely done...Sullivan
effective as the tyrannical skipper."
Unavailable
1993
Sea Wolf ***** Charles
Bronson as Wolf Larson, Christopher Reeve as Humphries, Catherine Mary Stewart,
and the schooner Zodiac.
Excellent adaptation of Jack London's
story, well acted, and even the interior shots were filmed aboard the Zodiac.
Available VHS (out of print)
German language DVD available
1997
Sea Wolf. An 'updated' remake with Stacy Keach.
Available VHS
Seven Seas to
1962 (original
title: Il Dominatore dei sette mari). Rod
Not
available
info and review provided by Blackhawk
1990 A coming of age movie
made in
Available VHS (out of print)
1990 AKA Kill Cruise
and The Storm. Jurgen Prochnow,
Elizabeth Hurley, and Patsy Kensit. Another failed “Dead Calm”. Two disreputable, and desperate, young
British women, stranded in
Available DVD, VHS
1947 Sinbad the Sailor. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr, with Maureen O'Hara
and Anthony Quinn. Sinbad after the treasure of Alexander the Great, pursued by evil
sorcerers and monsters.
Available VHS
1958
7th Voyage of Sinbad. Kerwin Mathews. Sinbad after the magic
lamp, pursued by evil sorcerers and monsters. Special
effects by Ray Harryhausen.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1974
Golden Voyage of Sinbad.
John Phillip Law. Sinbad
after the secret of the golden map, pursued by evil sorcerers and monsters.
Written, produced and special effects by Ray Harryhausen.
Available DVD, VHS
1977
Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. Patrick
Wayne (son of the Duke), with Jane Seymour. Sinbad delivering a bewitched
prince, pursued by an evil witch, and monsters. Written,
produced, and special effects by Ray Harryhausen.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
Special Note: There is a boxed set of DVDs available that contain the
three Ray Harryhausen Sinbad movies, 7th Voyage of
Sinbad, Golden Voyage of Sinbad, and Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. Includes: interviews with Harryhausen;
original drawings and photos; footage of Harryhausen's
Academy Award in 1991; exclusive notes from Harryhausen;
and all three trailers.
Souls at Sea ***
1937 Gary
Cooper, George Raft, Harry Carey Sr., Francis Dee. An interesting story of the effort
to put an end to the slave trade in 1842. Excellent performances from
Gary Cooper and George Raft, who make a fine team. The movie evokes the period it's set in, and deals with a serious, complex is
Available VHS
1945
Maureen O'Hara, Paul Henreid, Walter Slezak, and Binnie Barnes as Anne
Bonney. Oscar nomination for Best Cinematography.
Available VHS (out of print)
1985 John
Candy, Rip Torn, Richard Crenna, directed by Carl Reiner. John
Candy takes his family on vacation, falls into a feud with a snobbish yachtsman
(Crenna) and seeks the help of a local boatbum/ curmudgeon (Torn) in a yacht race to regain his
pride and the respect of his family. It's not bad, but definitely a cut below Captain
Ron (unless you're a big John Candy fan).
Available DVD, VHS
1992 TV
movie starring Robert Urich and Ali MacGraw. Based on Dougal Robertson's book, which
told the true story of his family's ordeal off the coast of
Not available
1976
**1/2 Robert Shaw, James Earl Jones. Practically
a nonstop brawl between pirates and anybody who gets in their path, this
lighthearted, high-energy 1976 movie set in 18th century
Available
DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
There have been five movies,(with one more in production as of 2006) and seven TV series (or movies) adapted from Johann Wyss' tale of shipwrecked colonists, forced to survive on a tropical island, while defending themselves from pirates. I read the book a loooong time ago, longer than I care to think about, so I'm uncertain as to how well any of the versions follow the book. The only film version I've seen is Disney's, and the last time I saw that was about 10 years ago.
1903 Silent
Not Available
1939
Not Available
1940 To quote Maltin
"...excellent adaptation of Wyss' book...
impressive special effects... strong perfomances, and
much darker elements than the Disney version.” Freddie Bartholomew starred in this
version. He was also in the 1937 version
of Captains Courageous, and the
’38 version of Kidnapped.
Not available
1958 TV movie starring Patty Duke
Not available
1960 **** The
Disney version. John Mills, Dorothy McGuire, James MacArthur, Tommy Kirk, Kevin Corcoran. Great escapist fun, I've yet to know a kid
that watched this and didn't like it. A swashbuckler for kids.
(Tommy Kirk and Kevin Corcoran also played brothers in the Disney movie Old Yeller.)
Available DVD, VHS
1973 TV. Animated short
Not
available
1975 TV series with Martin Milner (of Adam 12 fame) and Helen Hunt.
Not available
1976
Canadian TV series
Not available
1998 David Carradine, Jane Seymour,
James Keach.
Evidently an “updated” version, as the review I read talked
about machine gun toting pirates. It
also mentioned “drunken script writers”.
Available DVD, VHS
1998
TV series starring Richard Thomas (John boy Walton). In
this version the “Swiss” family is from
Available DVD, VHS (all 30 episodes)
2000
TV movie. They
list Will Rogers, Jr as being in this production,
which can only mean it was ‘in the can’ for a long time, as WR,Jr committed suicide in 1993.
Not available
2002
AKA Stranded A
US TV version without even a “B” list star. In this version the “Swiss”
family is English.
Available
DVD, VHS
There are at least 13 film
versions of
1912 Silent
1918 Silent
1920 Silent, starring Lon Chaney
1934 *** First talking version.,
starred Wallace Beery as Long John Silver; Jackie Cooper as Jim Hawkins, and
Lionel Barrymore as Billy Bones. Considered by many to be the
definitive
Available VHS
1950 ** Walt Disney's first completely live action feature. I hate this version, it's
too cutesy by a long sea mile. Bobby Driscoll as Jim Hawkins is too young, and I could get better acting from my boys by telling
them they had to wear ties and take math tests every day. I tried to show this
to my sons (ages 10 and 13 at the time), we got to the departure of the
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1972 *** Made in
Available on VHS
1990 ***** This version was done by TBS, and was a labor of love
for Charlton Heston and his son Fraser. It shows. The
Hestons and TBS took the best adventure story ever
written, and did justice to it. The score (by the Chieftains) is original,
appropriate, and delightful, and worth having by itself. The movie was filmed
in
Available VHS (out of print)
1958 Rock Hudson, Cyd Charisse. I caught a bit of this movie once on A&E, and it looked interesting. I have the Ernest K. Gann novel it's based on (an excellent story about the twilight of commercial sail), but I can't find a tape of it. The rating is based on what little I saw, and the fact that they seemed to be following Gann's story faithfully.
This was a real moneymaker for Gann. In his
autobiography, Gann relates that the studio bought the movie rights from him,
paid him to write the script, chartered his brigantine Albatross to use
in the movie, and then paid him to captain it - every sailor's dream! This is
the same Albatross that sank in the
Not available
1946 Alan Ladd, Brian Donlevy, and William Bendix in
the film of Richard Henry Dana's true story. The last time I saw this was on TV
over 25 years ago. I remember it as being pretty good, but I've gotten
unfavorable comments from several people, and the description of the plot on
the IMDb leads me to believe that they severely
altered what Dana wrote.
Available VHS (out of print)
1958 Viking
saga with Kirk Douglas, Tony Curtis, Ernest Borgnine,
Janet Leigh. Very dated, and slow moving film. On the plus side, they did a lot of research
on Vikings, so the ship, village and costume s are all very accurate. They filmed it in
Available DVD, VHS
2003 Radha Mitchell. A flawed movie, but worth
watching. The positives
first: Beautiful woman, great sailboat,
& some great sailing. If those
interior shots (under sail) were shot in a studio, they did an excellent job
recreating what a small (44’) sailboat feels like on the ocean, and how
difficult performing even the simplest tasks (cooking, getting dressed)
become. It’s pretty obvious that
some of the becalmed shots were done in a tank, as fog is rarely that
cooperative at sea. In spite of that, all
of the shipboard scenes and sailing were very believable. The story is interesting, and had great
potential, the failure was in the execution.
A 25-year-old Australian woman, an experienced sailor, sets off on a
solo circumnavigation. On the final leg
approaching
Available
DVD
1986
Sissy Spacek, Kevin Kline, Bonnie Bedelia.
An endearing and well-crafted love story set in a small town on
Available
VHS (out of print)
1993
Made-for-TV movie with Rutger Hauer,
Karen Allen, Eric Roberts. Another
imitation of Dead Calm, this one is more successful than the others.
I'll give you the negatives first. It's predictable, the bad guys are very one
dimensional, and, like Dead Calm, there's a point where you'll be
screaming at the screen, ranting for a modicum of common sense from the lead
character. On the other hand, the lead characters have a lot more depth,
and Rutger Hauer and Karen
Allen portray a middle age couple, with all the associated health and emotional
problems, quite well. They're attractive without being blow-dried pretty.
Despite its predictability (and one or two jarring flights from common sense),
the story is actually pretty good, and it takes place mostly on the sailboat.
The story line takes the boat and crew from Monaco to Malta in a series of
short hops down the Italian coast, making good use of some beautiful coast
(Corsica and Sardinia), and good sailing. And the boat is utterly gorgeous; a
sixty foot Chebec ketch named Charlie the Bird.
All the deck scenes were done on the boat, most of the interior scenes looked
like the real thing, and the sailing sequences are worth renting the movie for.
Available VHS (out of print)
1960 Comedy
with Jack Lemmon and Ricky Nelson. This movie is actually much better than the
title would lead one to believe. Set in
1943, the allies plan to use an old trading schooner to set an Australian coast
watcher on the shores of
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1948 John
Wayne and Gail Russell in the film adaptation of Garland Roark's intense
and dark novel. Very
well done for the period, with authentic-looking sailing and good acting. The second of John Wayne's
two sailing movies.
Interestingly, John Wayne used the name of the fictional shipping
company from this movie (Batjac) as the name for his
production company.
Available DVD, VHS
1995 Okay, it's flawed but
hey, Kevin Costner as the sailor of the future, versus Dennis Hopper as the
evil stinkpotter, that works for me. Oscar nomination for Best Sound. Razzie nominations for Worst
Picture, Worst Actor (Costner), Worst Director (Kevin Reynolds - with an assist
to Costner) and Worst Supporting Actor (Hopper). Picky picky picky! This movie is actually pretty entertaining,
if you think of it as “Mad Max goes to sea”.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1996 A modern story of tall
ship sailing, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Jeff Bridges. Based on a
true story, this is the best sailing movie not based on a classic novel, and
ranks as one of the best sailing movies ever made. The story, sailing, and
acting are all excellent.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1992
Lightweight, but enjoyable. The fictionalized story of the '87
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
How could I not include the film versions of Kenneth Grahame's delightful fairy tale? There are three animated versions, and one "live". The three animated versions all get at least four stars. I'll reserve judgement on the live version until I see it.
1949
Disney.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1983
Made-for-TV (
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
1987
Made-for-TV (US). This is the
only version I've seen as an adult. I have favorable memories of it, however it got the lo
Available VHS
1996 Live action.
Monty Python does a classic fairy tale. Written, directed by and starring Terry
Jones (as Toad), with Eric Idle (Rat), Steve Coogan
(Mole), Nicol Williamson (Badger) and John Cleese (Toad's lawyer). I was unsure about including this
version here, as the plot summary I chanced to read didn't sound like it had
much in common with the book.
Available DVD, VHS (VHS out of print)
Windjammer
1937 George O’Brien, Constance Worth. A lawyer is shanghaied on a voyage across the
Pacific aboard a large sailing yacht and must rescue a beautiful blonde from
sinister gun-runners when their yacht is wrecked by the gun-runners windjammer.
Available
DVD
Info and review provided by Blackhawk
1952
Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn, Ann Blyth, John
McIntire. San
Francisco-based sealers operating against the law in Russian Alaska in the
1850s. A little known film, in spite of the stars, I saw this a long
time ago on TV, and I enjoyed it. I had read the book when I was a teenager.
Available VHS
1952
Directed by Fredric De Cordova. Starring Jeff Chandler as Commander David
Porter, Scott Brady as Lieutenant David Farragut,
with David Jansson, James Parnell, and Jay Silverheels(Tonto from The Lone Ranger television series). Typical 1950s swashbuckler. They’ve played fast and loose with
historical names, and timelines, the story has little relationship with
reality, less with fact.. It’s
all models and sets, no real sailing and nothing that resembles it. I know it’s a nitpik,
but the swabbies uniforms were ridiculous. They looked like they’d been borrowed
from a community theater’s production of Pirates of
Available DVD(as
a boxed set with Against All Flags, The Buccaneers Girl, and Double Crossbones)
1983 Monty Python goes to
sea. Good fun. With Graham Chapman, Peter Boyle, Cheech
Marin, Tommy Chong, Peter Cook, Marty Feldman, Eric
Idle, Madeline Kahn, James Mason, John Cleese,
Kenneth Mars, and Susannah York.
Available DVD