petermorwood: (Default)
petermorwood ([personal profile] petermorwood) wrote2008-09-16 02:43 pm

What makes a Swashbuckler swash?

The various home-burned DVDs of movies saved from TV have been mostly transferred from unlabelled jewel cases (which might contain a CD, a DVD, a data/installation disk or just be empty) to proper library cases. Once they've got proper labels, they'll be a lot easier to find. Some of the tidying has produced a "why did I save this?" reaction - at least they're mostly RWs, so can be RW'en - but every now and then there's a "Wow, so there it is!" and one of those reactions was prompted by finding the Errol Flynn Captain Blood. I thought I'd loaned it to someone and forgotten who; turns out I'd put it somewhere safe and forgotten where.

I caught this on TCM more than four years ago, and was delighted to find incidents and lines of dialogue I didn't remember from Sunday afternoons on BBC1; it turns out the Beeb was showing a trimmed re-release, and the original (this one) is about 20 minutes longer, running almost exactly two hours. According to IMDb, this is the original running time; I suspect those 20 minutes were cut from the re-release to make room for commercials in a two-hour TV slot, and the BBC were simply showing the cut they had available.

Captain Blood is a bit of a curiosity; it's one of the great cinematic swashbucklers, and yet the swashbuckling is surprisingly understated. The actual "piratical" part of the drama doesn't begin until the 45th minute and I think, though haven't checked, that the very word pirate isn't used until that same point.

In addition, and despite its fame in the swashbuckling genre, there's only one major swordfight in the entire film, short, but perfect, when Blood (Flynn) confronts Levasseur (Basil Rathbone) on a rocky Caribbean shore. There are no other plot-point duels at all, and by comparison with modern examples, very little in the way of on-screen action of any sort except for the final battle between Blood's Arabella and the French warships bombarding Port Royal. Even a major plot development like Blood's advancement from runaway slave to famous buccaneer takes place mostly in montage and title-card.

This probably reflects the movie's smallish budget; a nitpicker (like me) can see where quite a lot of the intercut and back-projected ship-to-ship footage was lifted from other movies - The Sea Hawk of 1924 is supposedly one of them, but I'm sure I saw HMS Victory or a similar Napoleonic three-decker at least twice.

None of this detracts from Captain Blood's quality as a rattling good yarn. Yes, it may move a bit slowly for modern tastes (though it's by no means as leisurely as some) but since there's no mass of special effects or CGI for any lack of plot to hide behind, the film has to stand or fall on its story - and it stands remarkably well.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/la_marquise_de_/ 2008-09-16 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
It's one of the great classic swashbucklers, with the Ronald Colman Prisoner of Zenda, and the other Lancaster vehicle, The Flame and the Arrow. (The plot of the latter is deeply foolish, but it has some terrific set pieces.) And I recently came by the silent French serial (12 eps) of The Three Musketeers, which is seriously fabulous.

[identity profile] cuddles-batcave.livejournal.com 2008-09-16 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Jeez the last time I saw it on TCM, their copy was really worn and even spotted some scorch marks! You also mentioned intercuts for THE SEA HAWK (another fine movie I can watch over & over) which doesn't surprise me much. If you get the chance, hoping you can wing a copy to The Batcave.

BTW, do you guys have CAST A DEADLY SPELL & WITCHHUNT you could squeeze on the same CD burn?

[identity profile] jaxomsride.livejournal.com 2008-09-16 11:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Have you heard there may be a remake?

I loved all the Errol Flynn Swashbuckling movies and Burt Lancaster's too.

Was Captain Blood the one where he slides down the sail using his dagger?

[identity profile] cindyg.livejournal.com 2008-09-18 02:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Captain Blood stands up there with Scaramouche and Robin Hood (the Errol Flynn version) in any list of my favorite classic swashbucklers. Oh, and mustn't forget Zorro, starring Tyrone Power - I *love* that movie beyond all reason.

They are the standard by which I measure all other movies of the genre.

:)

[identity profile] mowi.livejournal.com 2008-11-07 11:04 am (UTC)(link)
Oh my god, I just saw Captain Blood and The Sea Hawk for the first time this past month... I absolutely adore them both, the former moreso than than the latter, though this is probably due to the addition of Basil Rathbone... Oh, how I love that man... and being French, no less!

Also, HI!! <3 I miss you guys so much.