Film Review
Ernest Hemingway's Pulitzer Prize winning novella
The Old Man and the Sea is not the
most obvious work of literature that anyone would want to translate to
the big screen, but producer Leland Hayward was determined to have a
stab at it, and achieved some success with this daring and
uniquely poetic film, which features Spencer Tracy in one of his most
challenging roles. Fred Zinnemann was originally assigned to
direct the film, but he pulled out at an early stage and was replaced
by John Sturges, who found the film to be his most technically
demanding and least satisfactory. Hemingway's story certainly
posed tremendous difficulties for both the lead actor and the director,
and whilst the film now appears pretty clunky, marred by a poor match
between location and studio footage, it is not without charm.
This is one of the few adaptations of his work that Hemingway was
entirely happy with, and it is arguably the one that is closest in
spirit and substance to its literary source.
The Old Man and the Sea has often been criticised for its
reliance on voiceover narration, which continues throughout the length
of the film, presumably to make up for the lack of dialogue.
Whilst the narration is certainly over-used and does at times weaken
the impact of the visuals, because it employs Hemingway's succinct
prose it does heighten the film's lyrical power and helps to distract
us from the brutally jarring transitions between the studio and
location shots. The film's main flaw is its failure to use the
recently invented blue screen process in an effective and convincing
way. Too often, it looks as if Tracy is sitting in a mock-up boat
in the studio, working a little too hard to react to pictures of the
sea that are projected onto a screen behind him. Even with an
actor of Tracy's calibre, it is a struggle to hold onto the illusion
that he is hundreds of miles out to sea and not merely sitting in a
studio tank.
Technically imperfect as it is,
The
Old Man and the Sea is nonetheless a beguiling work that somehow
carries the essential lyricism of Hemingway's remarkable short
story. Dimitri Tiomkin's beautiful score subtly works on the
emotions and allows us to see past the unconvincing visuals and develop
an intense spiritual bond with the old man as he endures his greatest
physical and moral challenge. To a generation that has grown used
to seamless computer generated trickery, this film will no doubt appear
risibly out-dated, yet for those who can see beyond mere surface
impressions it is hard not to succumb to the film's naive charm and
poetry. And with Spencer Tracy on board it can hardly fail to be
an involving and memorably uplifting piece of cinema.
© James Travers 2013
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Next John Sturges film:
The Magnificent Seven (1960)
Film Synopsis
Each morning, an old Cuban fisherman sets out to sea in his battered
skiff and returns empty handed at the end of each day, to be met by the
only friend he has, a kind little boy. It has been 84 days since
the old man last caught a fish and everyone who knows him thinks he is
cursed with bad luck. This is why the boy's father refuses to
allow him to go fishing with the old man. On the 85th day, the
old man goes out to sea as usual and is taken by surprise when he hooks
a fish, a large, powerful beast of a fish. The fish turns out to
be a marlin, and is larger than the old man's boat. The fish is
not ready to give in without a fight and begins to drag the old man and
his boat further out to sea. What ensues is a test of patient
endurance between a fish of rare strength and vitality and a solitary
old man who is willing to risk everything so that he may achieve his
one last victory over the sea...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.