MASTER AND COMMANDER: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: In 1805 Jack Aubrey, captain of HMS Surprise,
is obsessed by the mission to capture or sink the
French ship Acheron. More so than in any previous
film we are brought aboard a fighting ship from
Britain's war against Napoleon. The story may be slow
except for some really exciting action scenes, but the
historical detail is probably the best for any film
about the period. If you like Aubrey (or even
Hornblower) stories this film from director Peter Weir
is a must. Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high +2 (-4 to +4)
MASTER AND COMMANDER: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD is about life at
sea and it is about little else. When the film starts you are on
His Majesty's Ship Surprise, crew 197 men, and you will be there
for 138 minutes getting a fascinating education of what life was
like on a British fighting ship during the Napoleanic wars. There
are a number of good films about shipboard life in the British
Navy in the early 1800s. It seems to be a period that grabs the
imagination of writers and filmmakers. There is DAMN THE DEFIANT,
BILLY BUDD, and CAPTAIN HORATIO HORNBLOWER. But none of them is
as intensely a survey of shipboard life as is MASTER AND
COMMANDER. There is an overall plot of the Surprise's mission to
capture or sink the French privateer Acheron. Acheron is bigger,
faster, and has twice the number of guns of the Surprise. And the
viewer will be on the Surprise until that mission is accomplished.
The year is 1805 and Captain Jack Aubrey (played by Russell
Crowe), captain of the Frigate HMS Surprise is under orders to
chase the French privateer Acheron. Acheron is bigger, faster,
and has more than twice Surprise's guns. The Surprise is
overmatched, but Aubrey is a man committed to capturing his prey.
The chase is not like a Star Trek or even a Hornblower story.
When the Surprise is so badly outgunned, it loses battles. At one
point it is forced to flee from the enemy. The encounters with
the enemy are widely separated, but in between is a fascinating
education in what life is like on a ship of war in the early 19th
century. Aubry does not have Hornblower's 20th century values.
For example, when it seems an important object lesson, he has no
aversion to ordering a flogging. (This is something Hornblower
did only once, and then only because he was forced into it.) Yet
Aubry seems a reasonable man who maintains a good relation with
even the young midshipmen on his ship. On request over dinner he
will tell of what it was like serving with Admiral Nelson. He
even makes puns. But he does not allow the crew to question his
Ahab-like determination to hunt and if need be lose his ship and
crew stalking his powerful foe. The only man who can question him
at all is his best friend, ship's surgeon Stephen Maturin (Paul
Bettany).
The real star of the film is the HMS Surprise (played by the HMS
Rose floating in a tank at Baja, Mexico). As we see it is almost
a floating city. As Aubrey tells his crew, "This ship is our
home; this ship is England." We see a wide variety of aspects of
shipboard life: the maintaining of the ship, the preparing food,
the painfully primitive medical procedures, the battle station
responsibilities, the action in a storm, and the crew's crowded
life in the darkness below decks. The film is almost without
women except for one quick sequence when the ship stops for
supplies. We get to know the ship well. The enemy ship is
implacable and kept impersonal, seen only from a distance, for
most of the film. Curiously Crowe, who usually seems a bit rigid
in his roles, seems less stiff than naval commanders usually are
portrayed on film. Laughton as Bligh and Peck as Hornblower seem
to have backbones of steel rods. Crowe's body language is much
more flexible and informal. And while at times he is dedicated to
his duty, he seems a little too willing to reinterpret those
orders to help his friend. Much more than in other films we are
told the commander's philosophy of battle.
While many of the action scenes are enhanced greatly by CGI, great
care was taken to keep the digital effect undetectable. I am
usually bothered by digital effects and in this film I never
consciously noticed them in spite of their extensive use. The
battle scenes are realistic and exciting, but blood seems to be
kept to a minimum.
MASTER AND COMMANDER: THE FAR SIDE OF THE WORLD is a big film. It
is produced by 20th Century Fox, Miramax, and Universal, and bears
all three banners. I rate it an 8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high
+2 on the -4 to +4 scale. (Oh, that piece of classical music that
they use so liberally after battle scenes is Ralph Vaughan
Williams's "Fantasia on a Theme by Talis," long a favorite of
mine.)
Mark R. Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net
Copyright 2003 Mark R. Leeper
==========
X-RAMR-ID: 36314
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1219004
X-RT-TitleID: 1127359
X-RT-AuthorID: 1309
X-RT-RatingText: 8/10
NOTE: This review was posted on the usenet
to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup.
Mooviees.com accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review.
Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.