Daily Archives: September 6, 2018

Ship of Fools (1965)

Ship of Fools
Directed by Stanley Kramer
Written by Abby Mann from a novel by Katherine Anne Porter
1965/USA
Stanley Kramer Productions
First viewing/Amazon Instant

[box] Bill Tenny: [Drunk] You know what I think?

Glocken: No.

Bill Tenny: I think you’re a sawed-off intellectual.[/box]

Omnibus story

The year is 1933.  The ship is German departing Mexico with a final destination of Bremerhaven, Germany.  The first-class passengers are of various nationalities, with a predominance of Germans.  Many Spanish sugar workers are being shipped back to Spain since sugar prices have dropped and live in deplorable conditions on an open deck. Dwarf Karl Glocken (Michael Dunn) addresses the audience and says that all the passengers are fools.  Can we recognize ourselves among them?

There are several stories being told simultaneously.  One involves a drug-addicted Countess (Simone Signoret) who is being sent to prison in Tenerife for defending workers on the plantation owned by her husband.  Oskar Werner is the ship’s doctor who treats and falls in love with her.  Vivien Leigh is an aging divorced socialite who makes a strange dinner partner for boozy ex-baseball player Lee Marvin.  Jose Ferrer plays an loud and obnoxious early Nazi party member.  Prejudice plays a major supporting role with the Jewish outcast being one of the most affable and positive member of the cast of characters and particularly touching.

Casts of thousands and many stories to keep track of are hard to pull off but I thought this worked surprisingly well.  It helped that the stars involved were all on the top of their game.  Recommended.

Ship of Fools won Academy Awards in the categories of Best Cinematography, Black-and-White and Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White.  It was nominated for Best Picture; Best Actor (Werner); Best Actress (Signoret); Best Supporting Actor (Dunne); Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium; and Best Costume Design, Black-and-White.

Summer Children (1965)

Summer Children
Directed by James Bruner
Written by Norman Handelsman; original story by James Bruner
1965/USA
Robinette Productions
First viewing/Amazon Prime

 

[box] West: But everyone looks up to Franky.

Diana: Yes, but looking up to people can be a pain in the neck.[/box]

Trite story of young people boozing and screwing their way to and around Catalina Island on a yacht is lifted to the extraordinary by Vilmos Zsigmond’s stunning cinematography.

Three couples and a mystery deck hand set off on a sailing party to Catalina on West’s daddy’s yacht.  The hanky panky begins almost immediately.  One of the girls is not interested in this nonsense and is of course, the most desirable.  Franky, one of the boys, has musical beds in mind.  All this is accompanied by hard drinking.  The basic scenario does not change when the kids land on the island.  There we get some music and dancing to go with it.

An R-rated beach party movie without the beach.  Leering tone kind of left me feeling icky. But the cinematography is far better than it deserves.  The views of the yacht and the sparkling sea are spectacular.