Fletcher Christian successfully leads a revolt against the ruthless Captain Bligh on the HMS Bounty. However, Bligh returns one year later, hell bent on revenge.
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To put it simply, Frank Lloyd's "Mutiny on the Bounty" has the word 'classic' stamped in every inch of celluloid. In 1935, it was the kind of escapist entertainment no viewer would refuse, no critic would dare to minimize, it set the tones of swash buckling adventures, by MGM and other studios but a few of them to raise above. You would indeed expect a film from 1935 to have aged a little, it aged even by the standards of 1962 when Lewis Milestone directed the remake, but the two films haven't aged the same and there are many aspects where 1935 Best Picture winner is actually superior.But before unveiling the strength and flaws of the first movie made about one of the most famous mutinies in history (if not the most), let's just examine what makes the story so cinematically appealing. Beyond the usual archetypes of the costume dramas and adventurous overseas journeys, with their share of brutish seamen, romantic heroes and insular paradises whose female natives welcome visitors with garland of flowers and tempting hips, there's –on the field of storytelling- a clear and captivating antagonism. There are basically two images instantly associated with the Bounty: Tahiti and its Christopher-Columbus like mission involving a mysterious breadfruit and the rivalry between Captain Bligh and "Mister Christian!" (shouted with Laughton's fiery voice).One who had a mild interest in the story knows that it's not black-and-white, Bligh was an authoritarian, by the book, ruler who never accepted his orders to be discussed, and Christian was an idealistic young officer who didn't approve Bligh's overuse of flogging as means of punishment. But who in 1935 asked for complexity and cared to discuss the flogging (a myth according to history), those were the glorious days where the casting had to includes a comic relief played by Herbert Mundin, and a wise drunkard played by Dudlee Dinges, from their very introduction, you know there won't be much room for subtlety. There will have to be reasons to justify these big and angry close-ups on the sailors, to see Christian boiling from inside and making the mutiny not just inevitable, but believable and acceptable.The 1935 film then takes an angle that couldn't have been less ambiguous: Bligh is the villain (he was the nineteenth entry in the American Film Institute's Top 50) and Christian is the romantic hero. Charles Laughton is obviously having fun adding an extra-sinister dimension to his Bligh, with these bushy eyebrows and sneaky look, he can only appear accidentally sympathetic while Gable, more dashing and handsome than ever, gets too perfect for our cynical modern taste. This is one of the paradoxes of the movie, it insists so much on making Bligh evil that it actually does a disservice to everyone else, heroes included.It all comes down to Bligh being a sadistic monster, flogging a dead man or keelhauling one to his death and showing not a bit or sympathy toward any of his subordinates. Meanwhile, Christian and Bryam (Franchet Tone) are the noble carriers of the flag of justice, they're young (actually, Bligh wasn't that old), they're handsome, and since they're right from the start, they don't provide the same kind of genuine excitement when they're on screen. Worse, they inherited from the most cringe-worthy romantic interludes ever, with girls who've been probably cast for their ability to maintain a dazed enamored smile for more than five minutes not to mention the Chief whose phony accent doesn't fool anyone.The Tahitian parts makes the mutiny believable, after having lived five months in paradise (the Hays Code prevents any mention of fooling around) the men have to undergo an even more angry and severe Bligh. But the writers again try too hard, Bligh, instead of maintaining his men in good spirit, cut their ration of water (because the plants needed more), he accuses Christian of stealing and many other provocation. The mutiny could just had been a case of sailors who wanted to get back to their island because the taste of idleness was just too good to endure Bligh more months. Bligh had to be made a bad guy in a way that felt too forced for believability, but then, just when I thought the film was slipping, something happened a little detail was explored, one that even the 1962 version overlooked.When you look at the real story of the Bounty, there's this magnificent subplot about Bligh leading 18 men on an overcrowded ship (seven meters long) to the island of Timor (3600 miles away), an exploit even by today's standards. That episode says a lot about Bligh's determination, leadership and sailing abilities. Laughton is given his one redeeming moment, as the man who beats the sea itself. It is a credit to the writers to have allowed this to be shown. And when the story cuts to Fletcher and Bryam and their mundane little Tahitian life, the excitement is gone again, and Gable never seems to be in danger anyway, we're somewhat glad for him, but retrospectively, we never pinpoint a moment where his life was in any danger. At least, Blight had that moment.So, when the film makes a villain out of him again in the final trial, I was perplex, sure it looked like a good ending, with all the message about how to manage people, but anyone who'd read the story of the Bounty know whatever happened to the mutineers after that, made Bligh's point. It doesn't make Bligh right of course but it did call for other more subtle portrayals. 1935 was only the start, and quite a good one, with all the deliberate flaws and accidental bits of genius.On a side note, it's also the film that convinced the Academy to add the Best Supporting Actor category; the one Franchet Tone's nomination belonged to. There can't be a movie with three leading actors, although technically, they were.
"Mutiny on the Bounty" has been watched several times in the past five years by me. I watched the film in scenic pieces or as a whole experience, which strikes me every time how closely the movie still represents a nowadays labor society.The workers as the ship's crew treated by their fore-workers represented by the ship's officers. The fore-workers commanded by their superiors personified through Captain Bligh. The bystanders or above-the-law individuals represented by the ship's doctor, who drinks himself to death and a scientist represented by the character of a biologist, who loses all his research and scientific probes though the ship's mutiny.Nevertheless, in 2017 it feels like an idealized version on fate, when the from-privileged family coming character of Byam comes out clean from all charges and loses his guilt to start another adventure of life in the end, which gives me another proof of how Hollywood's dream factory keeps on manipulating audiences around the world to obey their daily treats, keeping busy at work and earning the right to party to avoid questioning essential topics on a way of life in the 21st century.On the other side, "Mutiny on the Bounty" also lets me surf in a sea of nostalgia of being able to identify with three leading characters. Director Frank Lloyd kept the screen-timing between the characters of Bligh, Christian and Byam in such a near-perfect equilibrium that the film is able to serve as a screen-writing role model for a triangle relationship in character-driven cinema. Scenes are not always as well connected as in a David Lean movie but the sequential grid keeps the suspense high enough to feel the entertainment factor in two-hour-plus movie, where minimal-invasive cinematography leaves no missing camera angle to wish for.The film's secret, which has already been revealed previously, subsides in a still-remaining universal question of what kind of man I want to be in life before death will end it all in an instant. The answer can not be given in full. The main characters' ethics are fluent. A flux of judgment must be felt in full-extension of all senses at any given situation. So that I am forced to conclude with a notion on life that I will be given everything and nothing in each moment in time. The trick may be to avoid lingering in any emotional state for too long and keep on moving to the next.
Mutiny On the Bounty (1935): Dir: Frank Lloyd / Cast: Charles Laughton, Clark Gable, Franchot Tone, Mamo Clark, William Bambridge: Entertaining and provocative adventure film set in the late 1700's. It involves a ship, crew, and a rebellion that takes place when cruelty becomes the norm. Charles Laughton plays the menacing Captain William Bligh who administers extreme punishment on members of the crew. Clark Gable plays Lieutenant Fletcher Christian who takes offence to Bligh's methods of discipline and eventually leads a rebellion to take over the ship. Franchot Tone plays Roger Byam, a midshipman who finds himself divided between his loyalty to Bligh and his friendship to Fletcher. Once they dock on an island they encounter a large tribe including Mamo Clark as a female whom Christian romances and eventually has a child with. William Bambridge plays the tribal chief who welcomes the fleet onto the island. Director Frank Lloyd leads a tense story that involves survival amongst those whom we are associated with. There are scenes of whippings and drownings as well as crew members placed in shackles as Bligh instructs strict action over the slightest wrong. The production is rewarding and action explosive with great island scenery. All this accompanies a strong theme of harsh treatment to those assisting in prevailing this voyage to conclusion. Score: A+ / Writing: 100% / Themes: 100% / Acting: 100% / Directing: 100% / Visual: 100%
Charles Laughton's Captain Bligh is a thorough martinet, a sadist who happens to be an excellent seaman. Clark Gable is the tough, but fair and humane Fletcher Christian to whom the mutineers gladly shift their allegiance.This film makes serving on board an 18th century sailing ship seem like a great adventure, at least under the right captain. As The Bounty ships out, strains of "Rule, Britannia!" are heard as orders are called out and men strenuously but efficiently perform the various tasks required for a sailing vessel.While the beauty of the Tahitian paradise is somewhat muted by the black and white film, and native costume is somewhat inhibited by 1935 production standards, yet the film does well to convey the joyful time the crew had in Tahiti, and the dread they must have felt to return to their ship, led by a sadist, with no prospect of ever returning to their native paradise.Laughton's Bligh is easy to hate. While the screenwriter gives little opportunity for Laughton to present a softer, more humane side to Bligh, there are two instances where some humanity might be peeking through Bligh's sadism. The first is a look of remorse when the ship surgeon dies. The second is when Bligh gives Christian "one last chance" to return to duty. No one believes Bligh's "one last chance," but Bligh seems sincere enough about it at the moment.Overall, Mutiny on the Bounty is a typical Academy Award best picture: a period piece, stars in great performances, epic in scope, and with an exotic locale. Mutiny is a very good, but not outstanding picture.