Film Review
One of Ealing Studios' more ambitious war films is this startlingly
realist adaptation of Nicholas Monsarrat's popular novel
The Cruel Sea. Its director,
Charles Frend, had previously made another notable wartime drama for
Ealing,
The Big Blockade
(1940), as well as
Scott of the
Antarctic (1948) and
The
Magnet (1950). Prior to this, Frend had worked as an
editor, his best work being on Hitchcock's early classics
Sabotage
(1936) and
Young and Innocent
(1937). It was through his collaborations with Alberto Cavalcanti
that Frend developed a penchant for documentary-style realism, which is
most apparent in
The Cruel Sea,
arguably his best film.
In contrast to many war films of this period,
The Cruel Sea vigorously eschews
the familiar clichés, melodramatic contrivances and toe-curling jingoism for a more
unbiased naturalistic approach. The film's episodic structure
and restrained narrative style give it a realism that makes what we
witness particularly poignant and occasionally brutally shocking.
Thanks to the compelling and heart-wrenching performances from a high calibre cast,
we see not only the physical impact of war - the destruction and
terrible loss of life - but the psychological damage that also
arises. The main character, Ericson (superbly portrayed by Jack
Hawkins in his first great role), is visibly tormented by the decisions
he has to make and, in a moment of horrific realisation, knows that he
may lose his humanity if he is to continue doing his job effectively.
One pivotal sequence is the one where Ericson's crew succeed in
scuppering a Nazi U-boat and come face-to-face with their human
adversaries for the first time, four years into the war. The
captain seems genuinely surprised when he sees that the German U-boat
crew are recognisable human beings, weak flesh and blood like he is,
not rampaging multi-tentacled monsters from an H.G. Wells story.
The dehumanising influence of war has done its work. The enemy
are not men, but some abstract depersonalised threat, as nebulous as
the other enemy faced by Ericson and his crew, the cruel sea. The
main strength of this film is that it confronts us with what is
possibly the most diabolical aspect of warfare. The supreme
tragedy of war is not that it destroys lives and leaves devastation and
anguish in its wake, but that it compels us to surrender the one thing
we should treasure most, our humanity.
© James Travers 2009
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Film Synopsis
At the beginning of WWII, Captain Ericson takes charge of a recently
commissioned Royal Navy corvette, the
Compass
Rose, and immediately begins a series of trials with his
inexperienced crew of raw recruits. It isn't long before
the
Compass Rose and her crew
are given their first mission, to escort a convoy of ships across the
North Atlantic. It is hard to say which poses the greater threat
- the tempestuous ocean or the German U-boats that furtively patrol the
shipping lanes looking for easy targets. At least the
Compass Rose is equipped to deal
with the latter. The experience of war soon begins to take its
toll on Ericson and his men. What began as an adventure becomes a
long hard struggle to survive, a nightmare that will never end...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.