Daily Archives: November 5, 2016

The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959)

The Wreck of the Mary Deare
Directed by Michael Anderson
Written by Eric Ambler from a novel by Hammond Innes
1959/UK/USA
Blaustein-Baroda
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Gideon Patch: You listen! I didn’t ask you to come on board, and I’m in command here! Now, if you don’t like it, you can go over the side and swim![/box]

This has some good performances and special effects but in the end I was left wondering what Hitchcock would have made of the story.

John Sands (Charleton Heston) runs a small salvage ship with one other man.  In the midst of a violent storm, they come upon the apparently derelict Mary Deare, which is billowing smoke and from which all but one lifeboat has been launched.  Sands boards the vessel to see what riches they may be able to salvage from the ship.  He is met by the half-crazed captain Gerald Patch (Gary Cooper).

Despite the fact that the ship is obviously in serious trouble, Patch will not accept assistance and orders Sands off his vessel.  But the storm prevents Sands from safely departing and Patch must save his life.  He stays on board and eventually follows orders until the two manage to wreck the ship on a rocky shore.  Patch refuses to explain any of the suspicious circumstances until he can be heard from a court of inquiry.  Sands reluctantly agrees not to reveal the location of the ship until that time.

When the men are finally rescued from the remaining lifeboat, Sands learns that Patch has quite a history with wrecks.  Surviving crew members accuse him of panicking and unnecessarily ordering the crew to abandon ship.  Patch desperately seeks to clear his name in the ensuing inquiry.  With Richard Harris as a sadistic bad guy and Michael Redgrave as the attorney for the Ministry of Transportation.

This starts off strong with an intriguing mystery.  It loses steam when the men reach shore and a fairly routine courtroom drama begins.  Gary Cooper’s late-50’s haggard mien and intensity suits his character well and the mainly British supporting cast is quite good.  The writing and pacing could have used more oomph, though.

This novel was one of the first projects Hitchcock was supposed to tackle when he came to the U.S.  It was interesting to ponder what he could have done with it.  In the end he and screenwriter Ernest Lehman could not come up with a satisfactory treatment so the problem may have been in the source material.

Trailer

Too Many Crooks (1959)

Too Many Crookstoo-many-crooks-movie-poster-1959-1020701655
Directed by Mario Zampi
Michael Pertwee; story by Christiane Rochefort and Jean Nery
1959/UK
Rank Organization/Mario Zampi Productions
First viewing/YouTube

Sid: [Billy Gordon has refused to ransom his wife] What are we supposed to do now? Keep her as a pet?

The leading lights of classic British comedy make a for a genuinely funny comedy of errors.

Fingers (George Cole) is the hopelessly incompetent mastermind of a gang of crooks that barely tolerate him.  He comes up with a scheme to rob millionaire and notorious tax evader Billy Gordon (Terry-Thomas).  When this fails miserably, his next idea is to kidnap Billy’s beloved daughter, who is about to marry a tax inspector.

too-many-crooks-1

As usual everything goes wrong and they end up with Billy’s wife (Brenda de Banzie).  The womanizing cheat doesn’t want her back.  The gang is up a tree until the wife decides to get delicious revenge.

too-many-crooks

Though the source is not credited, this is basically a take-off on O’Henry’s classic short story “The Ransom of Red Chief”.  One of my favorite comedies of all time is Ruthless People (1986,) which is drawn from the same source.The dry wit, double entendres, and Monty Pythonesque physical humor in this film made it thoroughly enjoyable.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfmOgvOq1s8

Trailer