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Captain Blood (1935 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Captain Blood' is a 1935 American black-and-white swashbuckling pirate film from First National Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures, produced by Harry Joe Brown and Gordon Hollingshead (with Hal B. Wallis as executive producer), directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Basil Rathbone and Ross Alexander.

The film is based on the 1922 novel 'Captain Blood' by Rafael Sabatini, with a screenplay by Casey Robinson, and concerns an enslaved doctor and his fellow prisoners who escape their cruel island imprisonment and become pirates in the West Indies. An earlier 1924 Vitagraph silent film version of 'Captain Blood' starred J. Warren Kerrigan as Peter Blood.

Warner Bros. risked pairing two relatively unknown performers in the lead roles. Flynn's performance made him a major Hollywood star and established him as the natural successor to Douglas Fairbanks and a "symbol of an unvanquished man" during the Great Depression. 'Captain Blood' also established de Havilland, in just her fourth screen appearance, as a major star and was the first of eight films costarring Flynn and de Havilland. In 1938 they would be reunited with Rathbone in 'The Adventures of Robin Hood'. The same year, Rathbone also starred with Flynn in 'The Dawn Patrol'.

In 1962, Flynn's son Sean starred in 'The Son of Captain Blood'.

Plot



In 17th-century England, Irish doctor Peter Blood is summoned to aid Lord Gildoy, a wounded patron who participated in the Monmouth Rebellion. Arrested while performing his duties as a physician, he is convicted of treason against King James II and sentenced to death by the infamous Judge Jeffreys. By the whim of the king, who sees an opportunity for profit, Blood and the surviving rebels are transported to the West Indies to be sold into slavery.

In Port Royal, Blood is purchased by Arabella Bishop, the beautiful niece of local military commander Colonel Bishop. Attracted by Blood's rebellious nature, Arabella tries to improve his situation by recommending him as the personal physician of the colony's governor, who suffers from painful gout. Outwardly resentful toward Arabella yet silently appreciative for her efforts on his behalf, Blood develops an escape plan for himself and his fellow slaves. The plan is almost uncovered by the suspicious Colonel Bishop, who has one of Blood's men flogged and interrogated. Blood is spared a similar fate when a Spanish man-o-war attacks Port Royal. During the raid, Blood and his fellow slaves seize the Spanish ship from its drunken night watch and sail away to begin lives of piracy.

Blood and his men quickly achieve great fame among the brotherhood of buccaneers. When the old governor is unable to contain the pirate menace, Colonel Bishop is appointed governor. He sends Arabella to England on an extended holiday, but three years later, she returns to the Caribbean. Her ship, also carrying royal emissary Lord Willoughby, is captured by Blood's treacherous partner, the French buccaneer Captain Levasseur, who plans to hold them for ransom. Blood forces Levasseur to sell them to him while relishing the opportunity to turn the tables on Arabella. When Levasseur vehemently objects, Blood is forced to kill him in a duel.

Blood offers Arabella valuable jewelry from his conquests as a sign of his love for her. Ungrateful for her "rescue," Arabella is indignant at having been purchased by Blood, and calls him a thief and a pirate. Although angered by her rejection, he orders his men to set sail for Port Royal where he will deliver Arabella and Lord Willoughby, despite the danger to himself and his crew.

As they approach Port Royal, they sight two French warships attacking the city; Bishop has left it undefended in his single-minded pursuit of Blood. With England now at war with France, Lord Willoughby pleads with Blood to save the colony, but the captain and his crew refuse to fight for the corrupt king. Willoughby reveals that James II has been deposed in the Glorious Revolution; England's new king, William III, has sent Willoughby to offer Blood and his men full pardons and commissions in the Royal Navy. This startling news quickly changes the pirates' minds, and they prepare for battle with the French.

After ferrying Arabella ashore, Blood and his men approach Port Royal flying French colors, but soon that ensign is replaced with the British Union Jack. A pitched ship-to-ship battle ensues, leading to frenzied hand-to-hand deck combat. Blood and his men defeat the French frigates, saving the colony, but not before losing their ship in the battle. As a reward, Blood is appointed the new governor of Port Royal by Lord Willoughby and has Arabella confess that she loves him. He also has the pleasure of dealing with his hostile predecessor, now returned from his pirate hunt and under arrest for dereliction of duty in a time of war. As Arabella playfully pleads with the new governor to spare her uncle's life, Blood reveals his face to the astonished Bishop, greeting him with the words "Good morning, Uncle."

Cast



Production



Warner Bros. was inspired to remake the film, which it had first produced as a silent picture in 1923,Tony Thomas, Rudy Behlmer * Clifford McCarty, 'The Films of Errol Flynn', Citadel Press, 1969 p 31 after the popularity of 'Treasure Island' (1934) and 'The Count of Monte Cristo' (1934) revived the Hollywood swashbuckler genre.

Some of the film's sea-battle footage was taken from the silent film 'The Sea Hawk' (1924).

Music score

'Captain Blood' features a stirring and romantic musical score, the first of its type for a sound film, by Austrian composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold. In 1935, Warner Bros. asked Korngold to score the film, but he declined, feeling that a story about pirates was outside his range of interest. However, Korngold changed his mind after watching the filming.

Korngold was required to compose more than an hour of symphonic music in only three weeks. The short time frame forced him to borrow portions of symphonic poems by Franz Liszt, which constituted approximately ten percent of the score. As such, Korngold was unwilling to take credit for the entire film score, insisting instead that his credit be for "musical arrangement" only.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXb1QqmrRNc;t=2m30s 'Captain Blood' trailer segment]

'Captain Blood' became an immediate hit, with an Oscar nomination for the score.[http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1936 Oscar nominees for 1936] As Korngold's first fully symphonic film score, it marked a milestone in his career, as he became the first composer of international stature to sign a contract with a film studio.Woodstra, Chris, Brennan, Gerald, Schrott, Allen, editors. 'All Music Guide to Classical Music: The Definitive Guide to Classical Music', Hal Leonard Corp. (2005) p. 701 It also launched Flynn's film career and gave a major boost to that of de Havilland, who would appear in another seven features with Flynn. Korngold would score six more starring Flynn. The film also opened the way for other costumed, romantic film adventures, which had not been seen since the silent era.

Budget

The film's production budget was $1,242,000.

Casting

The lead role was originally offered to Robert Donat, who had starred in the successful 1934 film 'The Count of Monte Cristo'. The asthmatic Donat turned down the role, concerned that the action sequences would be too strenuous for him.Thomas 1983, p. 67. A series of screen tests with various actors led to Flynn, an unknown Australian actor. In January 1935, Warner Bros. signed Flynn and brought him to Hollywood after seeing him in the British B picture 'Murder at Monte Carlo'. For the female lead role, Jean Muir was originally chosen to play opposite Donat, but after Muir declined the role, the studio focused on the 19-year-old de Havilland, who had starred in three previous films that same year, including 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' for director Max Reinhardt.

Filming locations

Most of the film was shot on a sound stage in the summer of 1935. Some exterior scenes, such as the sword fight between Rathbone and Flynn on a Caribbean shore, were shot at Laguna Beach, California. The final battle sequence between Blood's pirate crew and the French ships employed one of the largest technical crews assembled for a film, requiring 2,500 extras.

During filming, Flynn collapsed from a bout of malaria that he had contracted in New Guinea.

Reception



Box office

The film was a box-office success, earning Warner Bros. a profit of $1.462 million.'Errol & Olivia: Ego & Obsession in Golden Era Hollywood' by Robert Matzen, 2010 According to Warner Bros., it earned $1,357,000 domestically and $1,733,000 overseas.

Critical response

'Captain Blood' premiered on December 26, 1935 at the Mark Strand Theatre in New York City and was released in the United States on December 28, 1935. The film received positive reviews and notices and wide public approval.Thomas 1983, pp. 7172. However, 'Variety's' review cited weaknesses in the storyline:

Despite also finding flaws in the "scripting" of 'Captain Blood' and in the presentation of some battle sequences, 'Variety' called Flynn's performance "impressive" and predicted that his work in the film would provide him with "future big marquee values."

Writing for 'The Spectator' in 1936, Graham Greene offered a tepid review, describing the film as his favorite of those that he had reviewed that week but describing it as "a fine spirited mix-up" and noting the "magnificently wrong characterization" of King James. Greene also wrote that much of the film included anachronistic details related to clothing and setting. (reprinted in: )

'Filmink' magazine later wrote: "Flynn was lucky not just in being at the right place at the right time with the right lack of competition, but with his collaborators on Captain Blood."

Awards and honors

The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and, despite not being nominated, Michael Curtiz received the second-highest number of votes for Best Director as a write-in candidate. Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Casey Robinson, also unnominated, received substantially more write-in votes than did most of the official nominees.

The film was also nominated in the categories Music (Scoring), Sound Recording (Nathan Levinson) and Writing (Screenplay).

'Captain Blood' has been recognized by the American Film Institute in these lists:

* 2001: AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills Nominated

* 2003: AFI's 100 Years...100 Heroes & Villains:

** Peter Blood Nominated Hero

* 2005: AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores Nominated

Cultural references

A clip of the film was used in the 1985 film 'The Goonies'.

Radio adaptation



'Captain Blood' was adapted as a radio play on the February 22, 1937 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater with Flynn, de Havilland and Rathbone reprising their film parts. The radio version is included among the special features of the 2005 DVD version.

References



Citations



Bibliography



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