Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) is one of
the best nautical adventure films of all time and one of MGM's
greatest classics. The rousing, 18th century story of the
Bounty's mutiny, directed by Frank Lloyd, was adapted from the
first two volumes of the Charles Nordhoff-James Norman Hall 1932
best seller, The Bounty Trilogy (composed of Mutiny on
the Bounty, Men Against the Sea, and Pitcairn
Island).
For authenticity, the film was shot on
location in the South Pacific's Tahiti, as well as on Catalina
Island, Santa Barbara, and in MGM's Culver City studios, over a
period of three months. The over-budget (about $2 million) MGM
film was the studio's most expensive production since Ben-Hur:
A Tale of the Christ (1926), but it was also the
highest-grossing film of 1935 (at $4.5 million).
It was the first remake to win Best Picture
(it was a remake of In the Wake of the Bounty (1933)
starring Errol Flynn as Fletcher Christian). It was nominated
for a total of eight Academy Awards, and its sole Oscar was for
Best Picture. It was very unusual that the profitable film
received no other Oscars than Best Picture (two other earlier
MGM productions had done the same thing - Broadway Melody
(1928-29) and Grand
Hotel (1932)). The other seven nominations included
three Best Actor nominations (Clark Gable, Charles Laughton, and
Franchot Tone, who split the vote and gave the award to Victor
McLaglen for The Informer) - a unique accomplishment
(although Tone's performance was more like a supporting role,
but the awards category hadn't been created yet), Best Director
(Frank Lloyd), Best Screenplay (Talbot Jennings, Jules Furthman
and Carey Wilson), Best Film Editing (Margaret Booth), and Best
Score.
Charles
Laughton, who had won the Best Actor
Oscar for The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), gave an
exaggerated portrayal of the duty-obsessed, cruel and arrogant
Captain Bligh - he made the character one of the screen's most
memorable and abusive villains. [The first choice for the Bligh
role was Wallace Beery.] Virile Clark Gable, who had won the
Best Actor Oscar the previous year for It
Happened One Night (1934), took the secondary role as
the fair-minded First Mate Fletcher Christian, although he was
reluctant to wear silly-looking breeches, sport a sailor's
pony-tail, and shave off his mustache. With his performance, he
solidified his status as one of the leading actors of the 30s.
The screenplay departed from some of the facts
of the true event by romanticizing the cavortings of the
'beefcake' crew with the Tahitian native women, and by
distorting the historical record with a denouncement and
snubbing of the contemptuous, malevolent Bligh at the conclusion
of the court-martial trial - in fact, the notorious Captain
Bligh was later promoted to the rank of Vice Admiral by the
British Navy. [Of the various film versions of the tale, The
Bounty (1985), starring Anthony Hopkins as Bligh and Mel
Gibson as Fletcher Christian, was the most accurate.] One
remake, starring Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard, the 70 mm
Panavision widescreen version of Mutiny on the Bounty (1962),
fared poorly.
Novel
The
1932
novel by Charles
Nordhoff and James
Norman Hall tells the story through a fictional first-person
narrator by the name of Roger Byam, based on actual crew member Peter
Heywood. Byam, although not one of the mutineers, remains
with the Bounty after the mutiny. He subsequently returns to
Tahiti, and is eventually arrested and taken back to England to
face a court-martial.
He, and several other members of the crew, are eventually
acquitted.
Movie
Versions
From
the novel have arisen three movies that deal with the mutiny.
The movies were made in 1935, 1962, and 1984. These movies dealt
with the events of the voyage of the Bounty in different ways.
The
1933 Version
The
first dipiction of the mutiny on the Bounty was an Australian
film called "In
the Wake of the Bounty" and it is noteworthy as the
first film to introduce Errol
Flynn to movie audiences. He played Fletcher Christian.
The
1935 Version
The
first American film "Mutiny on the Bounty" was a 1935
film starring Charles
Laughton, Clark
Gable and Franchot
Tone. David
Niven and James
Cagney also had bit parts in the movie.
The
only Oscar
won by the movie was for Best
Picture for its producers, Irving
Thalberg and Albert
Lewin, but it also received seven additional nominations:
This
movie portrays Captain Bligh as an abusive villain whose cruelty
towards the crew and most of the officers lead Fletcher
Christian to mutiny. It contains scenes of the trials of those
who had been put off the ship on the launch. It also deals with
the aftermath.
However,
the movie does contain a few historical inaccuracies. Captain
Bligh was never on board HMS Pandora, nor was he present
at the trial of the mutineers who stayed on Tahiti. At the time
he was halfway around the world on a second voyage for
breadfruit plants. Fletcher Christian's father had died many
years before Christian's travels on board the Bounty - the movie
shows the elder Christian at the trial.
The
1962 Version
The
second "Mutiny on the Bounty" movie was made in 1962
under the directorship of Lewis
Milestone and starring Marlon
Brando and Trevor
Howard. This version did not win any Oscars but was
nominated for seven:
Like
the 1935 version, this movie also portrayed Captain Bligh as a
cruel tyrant whose abuse lead the crew to mutiny. However the
movie does not spend too much time on what happened to those in
the launch after being put off the Bounty. It only shows the
beginning of the voyage of the launch and then Bligh's
participation in the inquiry into the mutiny in England.
This
movie has the unfortunate distinction of being the least
historically accurate of the films. In this movie, this movie
has Bligh and Fletcher meeting for the first time - in reality
Bligh and Christian had sailed together before. Bligh was asleep
during the inital stages of the uprising, this movie shows him
as awake. Fletcher Christian dies towards the end of the film
right after the discovery of Pitcairn Island. However most
historical evidence shows that Fletcher lived on the island for
several years before being murdered, and some even believe that
he eventually returned to England some years later.
DIRECTOR
- Lewis
Milestone
|
RUNNING
TIME - 178 Minutes
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YAHOO
RATING - B+
|
IMDb
RATING - 6.8 out of 10
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COMMENT
- More historically accurate than the 1935 film,
but Bligh is still presented unfairly. The
movie concludes with scenes from the court-martial of
William Bligh for the loss of his ship. (Bligh was
acquitted.)...There are lots of beautiful sunsets and
lush island scenes, where great efforts are made to hide
the frontal nudity of natives.
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TRIVIA
- Brando was at his most outrageous in Tahiti,
ordering changes to the script (e.g., he wanted the
final scenes on Pitcairn Island reshot to include his
ideas about man's inhumanity to man), demanding that
film crew members prepare for a friend's wedding, and
insisting that planeloads of champagne and other goodies
be flown in for his consumption. He married a
Tahitian actress in the film (his third wife) and bought
an atoll on which he created a posh resort and an
environmental reserve.
|
The
1984 Version
In
1984, the movie The
Bounty starring Anthony
Hopkins as Bligh and Mel
Gibson as Christian was released. The movie is set during
the trial of Lt. William Bligh upon arriving home after the
mutiny had occurred. In this movie, the events of the voyage up
to and after the mutiny are shown as a series of flashbacks.
Bligh
is not so much portrayed as a cruel tyrant in this film, but
rather as a traditional ship's captain - a man of his times.
While some savage beatings were carried out under Bligh's watch
in this film, it seems to be in this film no different than any
other captain would have done.
The
crew is shown in a different light than in the previous two
films. They are shown to be a much more "rough and
tumble" group than the crews in the other films. Many of
them are shown as typical sailors of the time. Their motivations
in this film are not always as noble as in the other two films.
In
this film, Fletcher Christian is a more complex character. He is
shown at first as a friend of Bligh. At first Bligh thinks so
much of Christian that he asks the man to sail with him for a
second time. However over the course of the film both men turn
against each other. The feelings become much more acrimonius
after the ship leaves Tahiti after Fletcher has been forced to
leave his wife behind on Tahiti. In this film, she is more of a
reason that Fletcher mutinied than in the previous two films.
Afterwards, Fletcher is shown as feeling remorseful because of
the mutiny. He tells another mutineer that he wished he had
given Bligh some muskets.
In
this film, the crew is shown as having more responsibility than
they did in other films. This film does not so much hold Bligh
as responsible - rather it is the desire of some of the crew to
go back to Tahiti. However, it does make the fact that Bligh was
going to try circumnavigation as one of the reasons that some of
the crew decided to mutiny.
Like
the 1935 film, this version also concentrates on the trials of
Bligh and those who were forced into the launch with him. It is
the only film to show that one man died because of an attack by
the natives of an island where the launch stopped. Once
Bligh's launch reaches a Dutch colony, his part in the story
comes to an end. It shows the later voyages of the Bounty as
they go to Pitcairn Island. It then goes to Bligh's trial where
he is subsequently acquitted by the Admirality.
The
1984 film was probably one of the more historically accurate of
the films dealing with the Bounty. It shows both Bligh and the
crew as more products of their time than anything else. This
film also suggests that the motives behind the mutiny might not
have been as noble as suggested in the other films. It also
portrays the natives mostly nude as they would have appeared at
the time of The Bounty's visit to the island (the previous films
couldn't portray this because of censorship and decency
concerns).
Despite
the distinguished cast—including Daniel
Day-Lewis and Liam
Neeson in supporting roles and Laurence
Olivier in a cameo
appearance as Admiral Hood—the film had a tepid critical
reception (the capsule review in Newsday
read in its entirety as follows: "Man the bilge
pumps") and was not a great commercial success.
IMDb
RATING
|
6.7
out of 10
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FLETCHER
CHRISTIAN
|
Mel
Gibson
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LT.
WILLIAM BLIGH
|
Anthony
Hopkins
|
ADMIRAL
HOOD
|
Laurence
Olivier
|
JOHN
FRYER
|
Daniel
Day Lewis
|
COMMENT
|
The
movie opens with scenes from Bligh's court-martial for
losing the Bounty....This
is the most historically accurate of the three Bounty
movies (Bligh is more sympathetically portrayed than in
earlier versions), although the pre-voyage relationship
depicted between Christian and Bligh is largely
fiction...The movie's main focus is on the
relationship between Bligh and Christian...Fryer becomes
the Bounty's
tyrant in this film.
|
TRIVIA
|
One
of the last film appearances of Laurence Olivier and
one of the first of Daniel Day Lewis....Liam Neeson
plays Master-at-Arms Charles Churchill.
|
The
Musical
A
musical based on the same story appeared in the West
End during the 1980s.
It was written by and starred David
Essex.
The
1932 publication of Charles Nordhoff and James Norton Hall's
Mutiny on the Bounty sparked a revival of interest in the
titular 1789 ship mutiny, and this 1935 MGM movie version won
the Oscar for Best Picture. Clark
Gable stars as Fletcher Christian, first mate of the
infamous HMS Bounty, skippered by Captain William Bligh (Charles
Laughton), the cruelest taskmaster on the Seven Seas.
Bligh's villainy knows no bounds: he is even willing to flog a
dead man if it will strengthen his hold over the crew.
Christian
despises Bligh and is sailing on the Bounty under protest.
During the journey back to England, Bligh's cruelties become
more than Christian can bear; and after the captain indirectly
causes the death of the ship's doctor, the crew stages a mutiny,
with Christian in charge. Bligh and a handful of officers loyal
to him are set adrift in an open boat. Through sheer force of
will, he guides the tiny vessel on a 49-day, 4000-mile journey
to the Dutch East Indies without losing a man.
Historians
differ on whether Captain Bligh was truly such a monster or
Christian such a paragon of virtue (some believe that the mutiny
was largely inspired by Christian's lust for the Tahitian
girls). The movie struck gold at the box office, and, in
addition to the Best Picture Oscar, Gable, Laughton, and Franchot
Tone as one of the Bounty's crew were all nominated for Best
Actor (they all lost to Victor
McLaglan in The
Informer). The film was remade (badly) in 1962 and adapted
into the "revisionist" 1984 feature The
Bounty with Mel
Gibson as Fletcher Christian and Anthony
Hopkins as Captain Bligh. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Type:
Features
Rating:
NR (Mild Violence)
Running
Time: 132 minutes Starring:
Clark
Gable, Dudley
Digges, Herbert
Mundin, Eddie
Quillan, Franchot
Tone, Donald
Crisp, Charles
Laughton
Directed
by: Frank
Lloyd
HMS
BOUNTY | MEL
GIBSON | MUTINY
ON THE BOUNTY
|