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In
Portsmouth Harbour, England, in December of 1787, preparations are made to
sail the H.M.S. Bounty to Tahiti, where her crew will collect
breadfruit trees and import them as a cheap source of food for slave camps
in the West Indies. Before sailing, a press gang headed by Fletcher
Christian, the ship's lieutenant, strong arms Thomas Ellison, William
Muspratt, Quintal and others into the King's Navy for the two-year voyage.
Roger Byam, a descendent of a long line of decorated naval officers, is made
a midshipman on the Bounty and is commissioned by Sir Joseph Banks to
help him research his Tahitian dictionary.
As the ship is about to set sail, Ellison, who
does not want to leave his wife and child, is caught trying to break ship.
When Christian learns of Ellison's attempted desertion, he reasons with
Ellison and gently persuades him to return and serve his country.
Soon after boarding his ship, William Bligh, the
Bounty's sadistic captain, orders his crew to witness a "flogging
through the fleet," a brutal form of punishment in which court-martialed
seamen are flogged in view of every ship in the fleet. Although the
master-at-arms pronounces the court-martialed seaman dead as he approaches
the Bounty, Bligh insists that he proceed with the flogging.
Later, Bligh, who respects only one law, the "law of fear," and tolerates no
dissent among his crew, upbraids Christian when he complains about the
ship's indecent food supply.
Once at sea, Byam is severly punished by Bligh
after he and another seaman are caught engaging in a minor fistfight, and is
ordered to stand perched on top of the masthead during a storm.
Christian tries to end Byam's cruel punishment by calling him down, but
Bligh immediately sends him back.
Later, Bligh keel-hauls a sailor because he
asked for water to treat a wound. When Bligh accuses his crew of
stealing cheese from the ship, seaman McCoy informs him that he witnessed
Maggs, Bligh's clerk, remove the cheese in Portsmouth under his superior's
orders. McCoy is soon punished for exposing the captain's scheme.
Desperate for food, seaman Thomas Burkitt and others decide to risk their
rationed dinner and use it as bait for shark fishing. They succeed in
capturing a shark but, when Maggs insists on a share of the catch, a quarrel
ensues and Bligh intercedes. Christian accuses Bligh of starving his
crew, and Bligh calls Christian a "mutinous dog." Just as Christian is about
to strike Bligh, land is spotted on the horizon and the crew makes
preparations for landing.
Once
in Tahiti, Bligh is greeted by island chief Hitihiti, an old friend of the
King's Navy who greeted Captain Cook's ship when Bligh was a sailing master
on it ten years earlier. Following the polite exchange of salutations,
Bligh puts his crew to work harvesting the breadfruit trees.
When Bligh denies Christian shore leave, the
kind-hearted Hitihiti manages to secure his freedom and then introduces the
lieutenant to his granddaughter Maimiti. Christian falls in love with
Maimiti and, before he leaves Tahiti, he instructs Byam to tell her that he
will come back for her someday. At sea once again, Bligh orders the
flogging of four seamen who attempted to desert and insists that the ship's
ailing surgeon witness the punishment. The brutality proves too much
for the physician, and he collapses and dies. Christian blames Bligh
for the doctor's death and decides to put an end to Bligh's ruthless tyranny
by leading the crew in a mutiny. Christian takes over control of the
ship by forcing Bligh and his allies into the ship's launch and casting them
out to sea. He then turns the ship around and sails it back to Tahiti,
where he marries Maimiti. Christian then abandons Byam and other
seamen who were loyal to Bligh and were not loaded onto the ship's launch
with the captain.
As Christian leaves Tahiti to sail the Bounty
to a new island, another British ship, the Pandora, is seen
approaching on the horizon. The Pandora lands in Tahiti
carrying the rescued Bligh, who quickly arrests Byam and the others for
mutiny, despite their sworn loyalty to him. Determined to find
Christian and see him "hanging from a yardarm," Bligh navigates the
Pandora into heavy seas and breaks the ship on a reef. Bligh, Byam
and other survivors are rescued and then taken to England. Meanwhile,
Christian sails the Bounty to Pitcairn Island, where he sets the ship
ablaze and settles his men to begin life anew.
Five years pass and Byam, who has been convicted
of high treason, receives a pardon when the King learns of Bligh's cruel
disciplinary practices. Byam is soon restored to the Royal Navy, and
is assigned to its flagship, which is set to fight the French in the battle
of Trafalgar and "sweep the seas for England."
Notes
The film is based on the novel Mutiny on the Bounty by Charles
Nordhoff and James Norman Hall (Boston, 1932) and their novel Men Against
the Sea (Boston, 1934).
In the early 1930s, authors Bernard Nordhoff and
James Norman Hall co-wrote a trilogy of novels based on the facts
surrounding the late 18th century mutiny on H.M.S. Bounty in the South
Pacific. This film was adapted from the first two novels of the
trilogy; the third book was entitled Pitcairn's Island.
Although it is not implied in the film, the real Captain Bligh was later
exonerated by the English authorities. According to a biography of
Clark Gable, after purchasing the rights to the novels, director Frank
Lloyd tried to sell the project to producer Irving Thalberg with the
stipulation that he be allowed to direct and star in the film, and that the
entire picture be shot on a Tahiti-bound replica of the Bounty.
Thalberg agreed to let Lloyd direct, but rejected his other two demands.
Although copyright records list director Frank
Lloyd as the producer of the film, most contemporary sources list Irving G.
Thalberg as the sole producer. A biography of Thalberg notes the
following about the writing of the screenplay: Carey Wilson and John
Farrow were the first writers assigned to work on the screenplay.
Thalberg was dissatisfied with the Wilson and Farrow screenplay and later
assigned Talbot Jennings to the script. He then had Jennings
collaborate with Robert Hopkins to come up with comedy bits to offset the
film's seriousness. Still not satisfied with the script, Thalberg
brought on writer Allen Rivkin, who came up with the running comedy bit of
Herbert Mundin trying to dump a bucket of refuse into the wind. A
November 1934 HR news item notes that Lew Lipton was given an
unspecified writing assignment on the film. One week prior to the
commencement of principal filming, an HR news item noted that it was
"probable" that Harold Rosson would be the first cameraman, but Rosson's
participation in the final film has not been confirmed.
Contemporary sources indicate that MGM undertook
extensive research efforts to insure the authenticity of every detail
pertaining to the customs, wardrobe and maritime laws of the late 18th
century, as well as the historical account of the mutiny itself.
British genealogy charts were consulted for the purpose of contacting and
interviewing living descendents of the original Bounty crew. Also
consulted was a first edition print of a rare book published in 1790,
entitled A Narrative of the Mutiny on His Majesty's Ship "Bounty,"
authored by the captain of the ship, Captain William Bligh.
_NRFPT_01_small.jpg)
British
Admiralty records of the mutiny were also examined, as were construction
specifications of the original ship. According to an NYT
article,
Charles Laughton discovered that the Gieves Company, the very same
London tailoring establishment that outfitted Captain Bligh a century and a
half earlier, still possessed one of Bligh's original transaction records,
which contained the price as well as the measurements and type of material
of his uniforms. At Laughton's request, the tailor used the records to
reproduce Bligh's uniforms for the picture. According to an HR
pre-release news item,
Charles Laughton was so intrigued by Frank Lloyd's bushy eyebrows that
he had the makeup department duplicate them for his Captain Bligh character.
According to a September 1934 DV news
item,
Myrna Loy was originally slated for the female lead. According to
HR pre-release news items, the film was also intended as a starring
vehicle for
Wallace Beery and
Robert Montgomery. Beery was replaced by
Charles Laughton. The first HR production chart for the
film, which appeared in the April 8, 1935 issue, listed
Robert Montgomery, William Stelling, and Granville Bates in the cast,
but they did not appear in the released film. Montgomery was replaced
by
Franchot Tone, but sources conflict as to whether he was taken off the
picture due to an illness or whether a scheduling conflict with
No More
Ladies prevented him from taking the role. Although HR
pre-release news items and production charts list actors Beryl Mercer,
Robert Corey, Harold Howard, Elsie Prescott, Byron Russell, Charles
Trowbridge, Melville Cooper and Earle Hodgins in the cast, their appearances
in the final film have not been confirmed. Also unconfirmed is the
appearance of retired lieutenant commander of the British navy, Alfred
Alexander, who (according to HR) was engaged as a technical advisor
and was set for a part in the film.
In
Clark Gable's biography, he was initially against taking a part in the
picture and complained about having to shave off his "lucky mustache."
He also complained that he would look ridiculous in knee pants and a
sailor's pigtail, and that Laughton and Tone were given better parts than
he. MGM producer Eddie Mannix persuaded Gable to take the part after
assuring him that he would have the film's key romance with Movita.
Another Gable biography claims that the actor accepted the role when MGM
offered him a South American promotional tour at the end of production.
Principal filming on the picture was preceded by
an expeditionary voyage to the South Seas, where background shots were
filmed beginning in February 1935. According to an NYT article,
50,000 feet of film and 30,000 feet of sound brought back from the
expeditionary journey was unusable because the film was underexposed.
_NRFPT_02_small.jpg) A
second trip was made to the South Seas to reshoot the backgrounds. The
NYT article also notes that two replicas of the original H.M.S.
Bounty were constructed: the first, an exact and seaworthy copy of the
British vessel, was sailed to Tahiti; and the second, a stationary set, was
shipped on two barges to Santa Catalina Island, California where it was
reassembled in the town hall and used for interior shots. The town
hall was used as a makeshift studio during production.
Soon after returning from Tahiti, the replica of
the Bounty was anchored in Point Rey, California where, according to an
April 9, 1935 HR news item, local citizens started a movement to
acquire the ship as an historical monument. In October 1939, an HR
article noted that the Bounty and Pandora replicas were to be outfitted for
use in the 1940 MGM film New Moon. Additional filming took
place on Pitcairn Island (the South Seas island populated by the descendants
of Bounty mutineers), and on San Miguel Island near Santa Barbara,
California where, according to an HR pre-release news item, forty
Santa Barbara State College athletes were used as extras. Twenty-five
hundred South Sea natives were used to populate two wholly reconstructed
18th century island villages that were built by the studio in Papette,
Tahiti. According to studio publicity material, more than 600 cast and
crew members were housed for several months on Santa Catalina Island.
Reproductions of six native villages were constructed in various coves on
the island. England's Portsmouth Harbor was also reconstructed on the
island at a reported cost of over $150,000. Oarsmen from UCLA and
Compton Junior College were used as extras for the flogging scene.
According to DV, Assistant Cameraman
Glenn Strong was killed and several technical workers were severely injured
when a barge being used by the second unit capsized on July 25, 1935 in
heavy seas off San Miguel Island. Camera equipment valued at $50,000
was also lost in the tragedy. According to Thalberg's biography, a
second tragedy was narrowly averted when an eighteen-foot replica of the
Bounty with two crewmen aboard was separated from its tow in heavy seas near
Catalina and was lost for two days before being rescued by a search party.
Thalberg reportedly refused to notify the Coast Guard of the missing boat
because he feared that the "news would reach the public and destroy the
illusion of the film." A November 1935 HR news item notes that
Robert Brooks, owner of San Miguel Island, sued MGM for $25,000, claiming
that the production crew caused considerable damage to his sheep grazing
land. According to an NYT article, at a cost of between
$1,800,000 and $2,000,000, Mutiny on the Bounty was the most
expensive Hollywood production of 1935. An August 2, 1935 HR
news item claimed that the picture was the most expensive talking picture
made to date by MGM. A contemporary study guide to the film notes that
a total of 652,228 feet of film were shot for the picture, a figure far less
than the grossly exaggerated 131,000,000 feet reported in Time
magazine.
According to contemporary sources, Mutiny on
the Bounty was banned in Japan on the grounds that it promoted revolt
against law and order. Italian censors removed a number of references
to the British and British nationalism, including the title "Portsmouth,
England, 1787," a shot of the British flag, and the dialogue, "We're off for
the Mediterranean lad....We'll sweep the seas for England."
_NRFPT_01_small.jpg) A
NYT news item notes that as part of the film's exploitation, MGM
released a short film entitled Pitcairn Island. The short may
have been the same film as Pitcairn's Island Today, a one-reel film
that was copyrighted by MGM in September 1935. In the 1935 Warner
Bros. animated short film, Porky's Road Race, caricatures of Laughton
and Gable in their Mutiny on the Bounty costumes are seen. Laughton's
Captain Bligh was also parodied in the Walt Disney cartoon short Donald
Duck Goes to Hollywood.
Mutiny on the Bounty received an Academy
Award for Best Picture of 1935. It was also nominated for Academy
Awards in the following categories: Best Actor (Clark
Gable,
Franchot Tone and
Charles Laughton); Best Director; Best Screenplay, Best Film Editing and
Best Score. FD voted the picture one of the ten best films of
the year. In addition, the Screen Actors Guild gave
Charles Laughton an award for Best Performance of the Year, and Eddie
Quillan received second honorable mention. The Writers Guild
recognized Jennings, Furthman and Wilson for writing the best screenplay of
the year.
Other films about the Bounty mutiny include a
1916 Australian film entitled Mutiny on the Bounty; a televised
version entitled Bounty Court Martial, which aired on the CBS network
in 1955; a 1962 MGM film entitled Mutiny on the Bounty, directed by
Lewis Milestone and Carol Reed and starring
Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard; and a 1984 film, entitled The Bounty,
directed by Roger Donaldson and starring Mel Gibson, Anthony Hopkins, and
Laurence Olivier. According to a 1940 NYT news item, Frank
Lloyd announced his intention to film a follow-up to Mutiny on the Bounty,
called Captain Bligh, which he planned to produce on an independent
basis at Universal following his work on The Howards of Virginia.
Lloyd's sequel, which was never made, was to cover Bligh's career as
governor of the Australian penal colony, with Laughton recreating his
Captain Bligh role. According to 1945 and 1946 HR news items,
Charles Nordoff wrote a novel length sequel to the Fletcher Christian story,
which was to be produced by Carey Wilson and have
Clark Gable reprise his role as Christian. The sequel, which was
never produced, was to take Christian back to England and to South America. |