In 1944, at his officer training
graduation, Ensign Willie Keith attempts to keep his wealthy, clingy
mother from learning of his serious involvement with nightclub
singer May Wynn. Disappointed, May does not see Willie off as
he sails from San Francisco to the naval base at Pearl Harbor.
Upon arriving in Hawaii, Willie reports
to his assigned ship, the U.S.S. Caine, a beat-up,
destroyer-mine sweeper, and meets cynical novelist Lieutenant Tom
Keefer, the sober executive officer, Lieutenant Steve Maryk and
another newcomer, Ensign Harding. Willie is unable to conceal
his disappointment in the casual Captain DeVriess and the
dilapidated Caine, yet he nevertheless refuses a transfer
arranged by his mother and grudgingly settles down to months of
drilling of the clumsy, unkempt crew.
When DeVriess is transferred, Willie
anticipates the arrival of the new commanding officer, Captain
Francis Philip Queeg, coming off two years of combat duty in the
Atlantic. Although mystified by the crew's sentimental
send-off of DeVriess, Willie is pleased with Queeg's brisk, if
peculiar, manner. Queeg appoints Willie morale officer and
immediately orders the Caine thoroughly cleaned up.
A few days later, after a standard
target practice exercise, Willie is summoned to the bridge to be
reproached by the captain for not punishing a disheveled sailor.
Queeg becomes so engrossed in the reprimand that the Caine
steams undirected in a circle, severing its target tow-line.
The incident results in the Caine being summoned back to San
Francisco, where Willie goes to see May and presents her to his
anxious mother.
Willie takes May to Yosemite and
proposes, but May refuses, claiming that Willie is still too
concerned about his mother's opinions. Shortly after returning
to sea, the Caine is ordered to escort assault teams to
enemy-held beaches, but during the first mission, Steve is forced to
take temporary command when Queeg is inexplicably absent. When
the captain finally arrives, he grows anxious at the enemy shelling
and alarmed as Steve slows the ship to protect the smaller landing
craft. Queeg orders the Caine to drop its yellow dye
marker to indicate the landing zone, then to retreat to open sea.
Willie is perplexed by the captain's behavior, while Tom makes
sarcastic comments about Queeg's bravery.
Later, Steve sternly rebukes several
officers, including Tom, Willie and Harding, for making up a song, "Yellowstain
Blues," which besmirches Queeg. Willie is bitterly
disappointed by Queeg's character lapse, but neither he nor any of
the officers respond when Queeg makes a thinly veiled request for
support. When Tom observes that Queeg's eccentric mannerisms
and increasingly irrational behavior indicates that he is mentally
unsound, Steve demands that he take the charge to the medical
officer, but Tom refuses. Disturbed by Tom's suggestion,
however, Steve gets a book on mental illness from the ship's library
and begins keeping a log of Queeg's escalating erratic behavior,
which has begun to sap the crew's morale.
Late one night, Queeg summons all the
officers to begin an investigation of the disappearance of a gallon
of strawberries from the mess. When the lengthy inquiry
extends to searching each crew member for a duplicate mess key that
Queeg is certain must have been used in the theft, Tom reiterates
his challenge of Queeg's mental soundness and suggests Steve
consider relieving the captain according to Navy regulations.
Steve is further upset when Harding, who must leave the ship to
attend his seriously ill wife, reveals that he witnessed the mess
boys eating the strawberries and reported the incident to Queeg, but
the captain threatened to cancel Harding's emergency leave if he
repeated the story. Steve then asks Tom and Willie to
accompany him to fleet commander Admiral Halsey to seek advice.
On board Halsey's carrier, Tom
reconsiders, cautioning Steve that he may ruin his career by
accusing Queeg. Uncertain, Steve acquiesces and the men return
to the Caine. The fleet is then ordered out to sea into
a strong storm, during which Queeg risks capsizing the Caine
by stubbornly maintaining the ordered course, despite Steve's pleas
to turn the ship. When Queeg appears terrified by the violent
pitching of the ship, Steve, fearful for the ship's safety, relieves
him of command using the Navy code. Willie supports Steve, and
Queeg's order for their arrest is ignored by the other officers.
Sometime later, in San Francisco, May
telephones her support to Willie, as he and Steve are brought up for
court-martial. Cynical Lieutenant Barney Greenwald is the only
lawyer who grudgingly accepts Willie and Steve's case. At the
trial the prosecution is led by Lieutenant Commander Challee, who
establishes Willie's naval inexperience and gradual loathing of
Queeg. Testimony offered by other sailors reveals only that
Queeg was a demanding, driven commander. Under questioning,
Tom admits that he was not present at many of Queeg's supposed
displays of unstable behavior and lies that he had not suggested to
Steve that Queeg might be mentally unfit. Tom then goes on to
say that he does not believe Steve's log holds enough information to
justify the mutiny. A naval psychiatrist asserts that Queeg is
not mentally ill, but under Barney's probing admits that the captain
suffers from deep paranoia due to long and arduous combat duty.
When Queeg takes the stand, he severely
criticizes Steve, yet is unable to explain his earlier positive
written evaluation of his executive officer. Barney brings up
the tow-line and dye stain incidents, but Queeg insists his officers
were disloyal and unsupportive. Queeg grows increasingly
agitated when Barney mentions the missing strawberries and when
Harding's name is brought up, the captain takes up his nervous habit
of rolling metal balls in his hand and launches into a lengthy,
rambling defense. In the face of Queeg's obvious instability,
Steve and Willie are acquitted. Afterward, during the
celebration with the Caine 's officers, a drunken Barney
chastises them for not supporting Queeg and for putting the ship in
danger by their recklessness. The men are startled when Barney
accuses Tom of being the true instigator of the Caine mutiny.
Soon after, Willie and May marry and,
upon returning from their honeymoon, Willie reports to his new ship
to discover, with a sense of relief, that his commanding officer is
DeVriess.