Friday Minute
No. 46 | March 5, 2010
Our theme this week (theme introduction)
Film titles with two Oscar nominations for Best Picture
Featured this week
Monday — Moulin Rouge (1952, 2001)
Tuesday — Cleopatra (1934, 1963)
Wednesday — Heaven Can Wait (1943, 1978)
Thursday — Romeo and Juliet (1936, 1968)
Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)
Director: Frank Lloyd
Writers: Talbot Jennings, Jules Furthman, Carey Wilson; based on the novel by Charles Nordhoff, James Norman Hall
Cast: Charles Laughton (William Bligh), Clark Gable (Fletcher Christian), Franchot Tone (Roger Byam), Movita (Tehani), Mamo Clark (Maimiti)
Oscar Summary: 8 nominations, including Picture, Director, Actor (Laughton, Gable, Tone), Adapted Screenplay; 1 win (Picture)
Mutiny on the Bounty (1962)The essentials
The math says 1962 is much closer to 1935 (27 years) than to 2010 (48 years), but the look of the later production feels closer to something from our era of moviemaking than it does to the earlier film. In part that’s a result of the widescreen color photography, the spare-no-expense budget, and the three-hour length. But the performances also make a difference, with a cast led by Marlon Brando offering a more naturalistic, less hammy, rendering of the story. That’s not to say the newer version is a better film; I rather enjoyed 1935 film. (These days, we’re not likely to see another Mutiny on the Bounty made. Now, they’d change the ship to a spaceship and those nature-loving Tahitians to the Na’vi; they wouldn’t film it in Panavision, but 3-D, and they’d shorten the title too. Avatar fans may want to note, for the record, the ship sent a year later to search for the missing Bounty was the HMS Pandora.)
The 1962 film took more liberties with the truth, though both films were based on the 1932 book Mutiny on the Bounty, which itself is a historical novel, not a history, of the real-life mutiny that took place in 1789. William Bligh was the commanding officer of the Bounty during its fateful voyage of the South Pacific. After a stop in Tahiti, a group led by Fletcher Christian took command in a bloodless mutiny, sending Bligh out to sea in a small boat with a few of his loyalists. Bligh lived to return to England. The mutineers settled in Tahiti and Pitcairn Island, where some of their descendents live today. The mutiny, and the cruelty of Bligh toward his crew that led to it, is the stuff of legend. The tale’s been told in poetry and prose (among the storytellers: Lord Byron, Mark Twain, and Jules Verne), and at least half a dozen films.
Beyond the final credits
Of the ten Best Picture nominees featured this week, the 1935 release of Mutiny of the Bounty was the only one to win the prize. The film was the first ever to have three acting nominations, and the only one to have three nominations for Best Actor—Laughton, a great actor here chewing the scenery, Gable, minus his mustache, and Tone, as the true hero of the story.
…58…59…60.

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