Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) [Special Edition]

Posted By: Efgrapha

Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) [Special Edition]
2xDVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC, 16:9 (720x480) VBR | 03:05:14 | 12.96 Gb
Audio: #1 English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps; #2 French AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps
Subs: English, French, Spanish
Genre: Adventure Drama

This colorful remake of the 1935 version again concerns the crew and treatment of the HMS Bounty by a cold hearted sadistic captain. Captain Bligh (Trevor Howard) boards the ship in Portsmouth, England, to embark on a mission to bring tropical breadfruit trees to Jamaica. Fletcher Christian (Marlon Brando) is the aristocratic second mate who welcomes the new captain aboard. Christian's view of the captain sours with the cruel treatment of the crew and the dangerous decision to round Cape Horn. The Bounty sails into the teeth of a ferocious winter storm which is another in a long line of indignities suffered on the journey. John Mills (Richard Harris) is punished for stealing cheese. A sailor is ordered to stay aloft in the crow's nest, nearly resulting in death. The crew finds temporary paradise in Tahiti before Bligh's behavior becomes intolerable for the once faithful Christian. The crew revolts and sends the captain on his way in a small rowboat. Settling on Pitcairn Island, the crew soon realizes they may never see England again. Mills burns the ship to insure the trip is never made. Christian attempts to save the only means of transportation of their new island home. Lewis Milestone directed the film which was plagued by constant cost overruns to the tune of 18 million dollars. Brando's legendary ego clashed with results as turbulent as the fictitious trip around stormy Cape Horn.

Synopsis by Dan Pavlides, Allmovie.com

This sweeping remake of the 1935 Oscar-winning version starring Clark Gable-Charles Laughton suffers in comparison for the following reasons: it's overlong at 180 minutes, poorly paced, spends too much time on the unimportant Tahiti romantic interludes, and Marlon Brando's affected foppish performance (with a bad Brit accent to boot) couldn't match Gable's spry performance. Charles Lederer, the last screenwriter still standing after a few were fired, adapted the Charles Nordhoff and James Hall novel about a mutiny on an 18th-century British naval vessel en route to the South Pacific. Lewis Milestone took over the helm after original director Carol Reed jumped ship. The results of the film disappointed everyone concerned with the production. Much of the blame is attributed to Brando's delaying tactics, his collisions with both directors and other cast members, and need for pampering (he wanted the script changed in spots to get across his ideas about 'man's inhumanity to man'). When the petulant Brando, who at the time was on top of the Hollywood heap and most marketable, was not to blame, there was the matter of three deaths among the film's crew, the Tahiti rainy season delaying the shoot for months, a key actress in the Tahiti scenes taking a powder and the full-scale replica of the Bounty, constructed for $750,0000 in Nova Scotia, arriving nearly two months late in Tahiti to cause even further delays for the seemingly jinxed film.

The HMS Bounty leaves Portsmouth, England in 1787. Its destination is to sail to Tahiti and take back the native breadfruit to Jamaica. Breadfruit is a new food to the Brits, one that the West Indies Company wishes to utilize for great profit. That is the reason first-time sailor William Brown (Richard Haydn), a Kew Gardens gardener, is considered to be the most important man aboard the ship. The captain is the self-made and ambitious William Bligh (Trevor Howard), who is commanding his first ship as captain and aims to impress the navy brass on this important mission by getting the plants to Jamaica on time. His first mate is a gentleman with connections and good breeding, Fletcher Christian (Marlon Brando), who joined the navy as something to occupy his time and is considerably more lighthearted about his duties than the tyrannical captain.

The voyage is soon marred by a severe lashing of seaman Mills (Richard Harris) for a minor infraction, that is ordered by Bligh. The captain's a fusspot, who only worries about pleasing the admiralty back home and considers the mission primary and the lives of the men to be secondary. Bligh believes fear motivates the men to perform their duties and states his philosophy that "Cruelty with a purpose is not cruelty."

In Bligh's rush to meet the timetable, he makes a bad decision to take a shortcut around Cape Horn in winter instead of the regular long way around the Cape of Good Hope. The Bounty can't navigate through the strong winds and severe cold weather, and after weeks at sea the ship is tossed back to the same spot it started out from. In the process, one seaman died. Now having no choice but to go the long way, Bligh orders half-rations for the crew's chow and also inflicts a series of sadistic punishments. Once in Tahiti, the breadfruit turns out to be dormant and this causes a five month delay.

On the trip to Jamaica, Bligh rations the water from the men and gives it instead to the valuable plants so that they could be kept alive. He also continues his floggings and the cruel punishment of keelhauling, which causes another death (the third). It leads to Christian siding with some of the rebels, who were caught deserting in Tahiti and are facing a court-martial back home. They are now leading the protests over the water rationing, when Christian disobeys Bligh and gives a sick crewman a ladle of water. When Bligh orders the arrest of the first mate, he attacks his captain and begins the mutiny. The 1935 version wisely followed Bligh's staggering open boat voyage to the next port about 4,000 miles away and subsequent court-martial back home while almost totally ignoring Christian's dilemma. This "Mutiny" does the reverse, so we follow a despairing Christian and his fellow mutineers as they arrive in Tahiti and then move on to the Pitcairn Island–meeting with tragic results.

The film had an estimated budget of $27 million. Its box-office failure nearly sunk MGM, and it sadly ended Milestone's career. Though a visually beautiful picture, shot in the studio and on location in Tahiti, Pitcairn Island, and Bora, its picture postcard scenery couldn't hide how colorless the film felt at times.

Review by Dennis Schwartz, "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"

IMDB 7,2/10 from 9 599 users
Wiki

Director: Lewis Milestone

Writers: Charles Lederer, Charles Nordhoff, James Norman Hall

Cast: Marlon Brando, Trevor Howard, Richard Harris, Hugh Griffith, Richard Haydn, Tarita, Percy Herbert and other























Special Features:

DISC ONE:

The Film (Part 1)

- Prologue (4:10)
- Epilogue (3:20)
- “1964 New York World’s Fair" original promo (6:35)
- “Story of the HMS Bounty” featurette (28:35)
- Theatrical Trailer
- Bonus Trailers for Julius Caesar, Reflections in a Golden Eye, and The Formula

DISC TWO:

The Film (Part 2)

- “After the Cameras Stopped Rolling: The Journey of the Bounty” featurette (24:15)
- “Tour of the Bounty” featurette (7:53)
- “Voyage of the Bounty to St. Petersburg” featurette (23:55)

All thanks to original releaser

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