Film Review
For all its lavish production values, epic scale and colossal budget,
this adaptation of
Mutiny on the
Bounty fails to live up to the excellence of MGM's 1935 version,
the classic in which Charles Laughton starred as cinema's definitive Captain
Bligh. This was the first film to make use of the Ultra
Panavision 70 widescreen process and the results are spectacular,
particularly the location sequences, which capture the awesome natural
splendour of Tahiti as vividly as a Gauguin painting. The storm
sequences set on board the
Bounty
are just as impressive and were a technical achievement for the time
when the film was made.
There is just
one thing that
prevents this film from being an all-time classic, and that
is the truly horrific miscasting of Marlon Brando as Fletcher Christian. Brando
insisted on playing the part as an English fop and consequently gives a
performance that alternates between theatrical absurdity and grotesque
caricature (of the kind you would find in a 1950s British
comedy). Brando may have been sincere in his work, but he
singularly fails to make his character remotely convincing.
Just how is an audience to take Christian Fletcher seriously if he is
played as a foppish poseur who looks as though he would
be more at home making soft furnishings
than commanding a naval vessel in the 18th Century?
With his effete mannerisms and forced vocal impersonation of
an Eton schoolboy, Brando shamelessly manages to reduce the entire production to the level of an extravagant
parody. This is in spite of the generally laudable contributions
from his co-stars, particularly Trevor Howard, who makes a pretty
respectable Captain Bligh.
By this stage in his career, Marlon Brando had acquired a reputation as
a problem actor - unpredictable, hot-headed and difficult to get on
with. He came close to scuppering the production with his much
publicised antics, which included organising impromptu parties and
roping members of the crew into working on the decorations for a
friend's wedding. It was Brando who had a hand in Lewis Milestone
replacing Carol Reed as the film's director early into the location
shoot and it was Brando who was at least partly to blame for the film's
costly overrun.
Despite the escalating production difficulties, the making of this film
was to have a profound impact on Brando's personal life. He fell
in love with Tarita Teriipia, the Tahitian beauty who played his
character's love interest in the film, and would marry her a short time
later. So taken was he by the simple way of life of the Tahitians
that Brando bought the Tetiaroa atoll (the refuge
for three of the real-life deserters from the
Bounty), where he installed a private
resort and environmental research laboratory. It was through
Teriipia that Brando became fluent in French, although their marriage
would only last ten years. Whilst many regard
Mutiny on the Bounty as one of the
low points of Brando's career, it also marked the
beginning of one of the happier phases of the actor's life.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Lewis Milestone film:
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
Film Synopsis
In 1787, the HMS
Bounty sets
sail from Portsmouth, England, bound for the island of Tahiti.
There, specimens of breadfruit plant are to be gathered and transported
to Jamaica, to provide a cheap food supply for plantation slaves.
Captain William Bligh governs his crew with an iron hand and shows no
mercy if they should dare to step out of line. The relish with
which Bligh dishes out punishment appals his second-in-command, First
Lieutenant Fletcher Christian. In a foolhardy attempt to shorten
the sea crossing by several months, Bligh gives the order to sail
westwards, around Cape Horn, despite the treacherous winter storms that
they well surely encounter. When this proves to be impracticable,
Bligh has no choice but to take the safer route, around the southern
coast of Africa, but he blames his men for the time that has been
lost. Arriving in Tahiti, the crew of the
Bounty find themselves in a
tropical paradise, where the natives are not only friendly but
over-willing when it comes to sharing the fruits of nature, including
free love. To impress his superiors and atone for the delay
in his arrival, Bligh takes on board twice as many breadfruit plants as
he was instructed to do. Not long after the ship has left Tahiti,
the plants begin to die because there is insufficient water for them
all. To save his precious cargo of plants, Bligh has no option
but to strictly reduce his crew's water rations. Deprived of
water, the men soon become hostile towards Bligh and, after one dies
through thirst, even Fletcher Christian is provoked into turning
against the captain. When Christian offers water to another man
who drank sea water to quench his thirst, Bligh strikes him. It
is the last straw. Christian turns on the captain and, supported
by the mutinous crew, he takes command of the
Bounty. As Bligh and his few
loyal crew members are loaded into a longboat and set adrift in the
Pacific Ocean, the captain swears that if ever he gets back to England
he will arrange for warships to be sent out to hunt down the mutineers
and bring them to justice...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.