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The Sea Hawk (1940 film)

The Sea Hawk is a 1940 American adventure film from Warner Bros. that stars Errol Flynn as an English privateer who defends his nation's interests on the eve of the launch of the Spanish Armada. The film was the tenth collaboration between Flynn and director Michael Curtiz. Its screenplay was written by Howard Koch and Seton I. Miller. The rousing musical score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold is recognized as a high point in his career. The film was both an adventure and a period piece about Elizabethan England's struggles with Spain. It was also meant as a deliberately pro-British propaganda film to build morale during World War II and to influence the American public into having a more pro-British outlook. King Philip was presented as an allegorical Hitler.[5] (The same theme had been visited in Alexander Korda's film Fire Over England, released three years earlier, before World War II started).[6]

The Sea Hawk
Film poster
Directed byMichael Curtiz
Written byHoward Koch
Seton I. Miller
Produced byHenry Blanke
Hal B. Wallis
StarringErrol Flynn
Brenda Marshall
Claude Rains
CinematographySol Polito
Edited byGeorge Amy
Music byErich Wolfgang Korngold
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • July 1, 1940 (1940-07-01)
Running time
127 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,701,211[1][2]
Box office$2,678,000[2]
$2 million (US)[3]
3,280,538 admissions (France) (1947)[4]

Colorized versions of The Sea Hawk were broadcast on American television and distributed on VHS tape in 1986. Only the black-and-white, edited version (109 minutes) and the fully restored/uncut version (127 minutes) have been released on the DVD and Blu-ray formats. No plans have been announced to release the colorized version on DVD.

Plot

King Philip II of Spain declares his intention to destroy England as a first step to world conquest, eager to make his empire reach from Northern Europe to China and India. He sends Don Álvarez as his ambassador to allay the suspicions of Queen Elizabeth I about the great armada he is building to invade England. In England, some of the queen's ministers plead with her to build a fleet, which she hesitates to do in order to spare the purses of her subjects.

The ambassador's ship is captured en route to England by the Albatross and her captain, Geoffrey Thorpe. Don Álvarez and his niece Doña María are taken aboard and transported to England. Thorpe immediately is enchanted by Doña María and gallantly returns her plundered jewels. Her detestation of him softens as she too begins to fall in love.

Don Álvarez is granted an audience with the queen and complains about his treatment; Doña María is accepted as one of her maids of honour. The "Sea Hawks", a group of English privateers who raid Spanish merchant shipping, appear before the queen, who scolds them (at least publicly) for their activities and for endangering the peace with Spain. Captain Thorpe proposes in private a plan to seize a Spanish treasure fleet coming back from Spain's colonies in the Americas. The queen is wary of Spain's reaction, but allows Thorpe to proceed.

Suspicious, Lord Wolfingham, one of the queen's ministers and a secret Spanish collaborator, sends a spy to try to discover where the Albatross is really heading. Upon visiting the chartmaker responsible for drawing the charts for Thorpe's next voyage, Don Álvarez and Lord Wolfingham determine that he is sailing to the Isthmus of Panama and order the captain of Don Álvarez's ship to sail ahead to set up an ambush.

When the Albatross reaches its destination, the ship is spotted. Thorpe's crew seizes the caravan, but fall into a well-laid trap and are driven into the swamps. Thorpe and a few other survivors return to their ship, only to find it in Spanish hands. They are taken to Spain, tried by the Inquisition, and sentenced to life imprisonment as galley slaves. In England, Don Álvarez informs the queen of Thorpe's fate, causing his niece to faint. The queen expels him from her court.

On a Spanish galley, Thorpe meets an Englishman named Abbott who was captured trying to uncover evidence of the Armada's true purpose. The prisoners manage to take over the ship during the night. They board another ship in the harbor, where an emissary has stored secret incriminating plans. Thorpe and his men sail both ships back to England with the plans.

Upon reaching port, Thorpe tries to warn the queen. A carriage bringing Don Álvarez to the ship which, unknown to him, Thorpe has captured, also brings his niece. Don Álvarez boards the ship and is held prisoner, while Captain Thorpe, dressed in the uniform of a Spanish courtier, sneaks into the carriage carrying Doña María, who has decided to stay in England and wait for Thorpe's return. The two finally declare their love for each other, and María helps Thorpe to sneak into the palace. However, Lord Wolfingham's spy spots Thorpe and alerts the castle guards to stop the carriage and take Thorpe prisoner. Thorpe escapes and enters the queen's residence, fending off guards all the while.

Eventually, Thorpe runs into Lord Wolfingham and kills the traitor in a swordfight. With Doña María's assistance, Thorpe reaches the queen and provides proof of King Philip's intentions. Elizabeth knights Thorpe and declares her intention to build a great fleet to oppose the Spanish threat.

Cast

 
Flynn, c. 1940

Production

The portions of the film set in the Americas are tinted sepia.[7]

The film was announced in June 1936 and would star Errol Flynn, then coming off his success with Captain Blood.[8]

Originally planned as an adaptation of Rafael Sabatini's 1915 novel The Sea Hawk, the film used an entirely different story inspired by the exploits of Sir Francis Drake,[9] unlike the 1924 silent film adaptation, which was fairly faithful to Sabatini's plot (which, in turn, was very similar to the plot of Captain Blood).

Adaptations of the novel were written by Richard Neville and Delmer Daves before Seton I Miller wrote a basically new story titled Beggars of the Sea based on Sir Francis Drake. Sabatini's name was still used in promotional materials however as it was felt it had commercial value. Howard Koch then reworked Miller's script while still keeping the basic structure and story.[1][10]

The speech the queen gives at the close of the film was meant to inspire the viewing British audience, which was already in the grip of the Second World War. Suggestions that it was the duty of all free men to defend liberty, and that the world did not belong to any one man (an obvious insinuation of Hitler's wish to conquer Europe), were rousing.

The 2005 Warner Brothers DVD release includes a 1940 Movietone News newsreel of the Battle of Britain, the short "Alice in Movieland," the Looney Tunes cartoon "Porky's Poor Fish", and a 20-minute featurette "The Sea Hawk: Flynn in Action" about the film's production.

Music

The music was written by composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold. When The Sea Hawk opened in theatres, a commercial recording was not contemplated. It was not until 1962 that a bit of music from the film was released on an LP titled Music by Erich Wolfgang Korngold. Ten years later Charles Gerhardt and Korngold's son George included 6:53 minutes of The Sea Hawk score on RCA's album The Classic Film Scores of Erich Wolfgang Korngold. A complete re-recording was issued in 2007 by the Naxos label, recorded with the Moscow Symphony Orchestra and Chorus led by William T. Stromberg [it] and reconstructed by John W. Morgan.

Reception

Critical

Bosley Crowther wrote in The New York Times of 10 August 1940,

"Of course, [the film] is all historically cockeyed, and the amazing exploits of Mr. Flynn, accomplished by him in the most casual and expressionless manner, are quite as incredible as the adventures of Dick Tracy. But Flora Robson makes an interesting Queen Elizabeth, Claude Rains and Henry Daniell play a couple of villainous conspirators handsomely, there is a lot of brocaded scenery and rich Elizabethan costumes and, of course, there is Brenda Marshall to shed a bit of romantic light. And, when you come right down to it, that's about all one can expect in an overdressed 'spectacle' film which derives much more from the sword than from the pen."[11]

A review by Time on 19 August 1940 observed that:

"The Sea Hawk (Warner) is 1940's lustiest assault on the double feature. It cost $1,700,000, exhibits Errol Flynn and 3,000 other cinemactors performing every imaginable feat of spectacular derring-do, and lasts two hours and seven minutes...Produced by Warner's Hal Wallis with a splendor that would set parsimonious Queen Bess's teeth on edge, constructed of the most tried-&-true cinema materials available, The Sea Hawk is a handsome, shipshape picture. To Irish [sic] Cinemactor Errol Flynn, it gives the best swashbuckling role he has had since Captain Blood. For Hungarian Director Michael Curtiz, who took Flynn from bit-player ranks to make Captain Blood and has made nine pictures with him since, it should prove a high point in their profitable relationship."[12]

Filmink called it "pretty close to perfection as these things go."[13] This movie has a one hundred percent rating based on twelve critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.

Box office

The film had been in planning since Errol Flynn's success in the swashbuckler epic Captain Blood.[14] According to Warner Bros records, the film was Warners' most expensive and most popular film of 1940. It made $1,631,000 in the U.S. and $1,047,000 in other markets.[2] Upon release in 1940, the film was among the higher grossing films of the year, and in several states (including Florida, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia) it was the highest grossing film of the year, and in several others (including Tennessee, Mississippi, Kentucky and Arkansas), it was the second highest grossing film of the year, coming behind Rebecca.

1947 re-release

The film was re-released to great popularity in 1947.[10] It was one of the more popular films that screened in France that year.[4]

Awards

The film was nominated for four Academy Awards:[15]

References

  1. ^ a b Behlmer, Rudy; Balio, Tino, eds. (June 15, 1982). "Introduction". The Sea Hawk. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0299090142.
  2. ^ a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Schaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 20 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
  3. ^ "WHICH CINEMA FILMS HAVE EARNED THE MOST MONEY SINCE 1914?". Supplement: The Argus Weekend magazine. The Argus. Melbourne. 4 March 1944. p. 3. Retrieved 6 August 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ a b "Box office figures for 1947 France". Box Office Story.
  5. ^ von Tunzelmann, Alex (19 March 2021). "Glenda Jackson's Elizabeth I embodies a timeless royal quandary: duty or desire?". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  6. ^ Hixson, Walter L. (2003). The American Experience in World War II: The United States and the road to war in Europe, Volume 1 of The American Experience in World War II. Taylor & Francis. pp. 30–34. ISBN 9780415940290.
  7. ^ "Facts about "The Sea Hawk" : Classic Movie Hub (CMH)".
  8. ^ "WARNERS TO SHOW 60 FEATURE FILMS: 1936-37 Production Schedule Announced at Convention in Progress Here. GREEN PASTURES' LISTED Seven Other Stage Successes to Be Screened -- Adaptation of 'Anthony Adverse' Ready". Amusements. The New York Times. 4 June 1936. p. 27.
  9. ^ Kael, Pauline (May 15, 1991). 5001 Nights at the Movies. Henry Holt and Company. p. 660. ISBN 0-8050-1367-9.
  10. ^ a b Tony Thomas, Rudy Behlmer * Clifford McCarty, The Films of Errol Flynn, Citadel Press, 1969 p 93-96
  11. ^ New York Times Review. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  12. ^ Time Review. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  13. ^ Vagg, Stephen (November 17, 2019). "The Films of Errol Flynn: Part 3 The War Years". Filmink.
  14. ^ McNulty, Thomas (2004). Errol Flynn: The Life and Career. McFarland & Company. p. 101. ISBN 9780786417506.
  15. ^ "The 13th Academy Awards (1941) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 2011-08-13.

External links

hawk, 1940, film, hawk, 1940, american, adventure, film, from, warner, bros, that, stars, errol, flynn, english, privateer, defends, nation, interests, launch, spanish, armada, film, tenth, collaboration, between, flynn, director, michael, curtiz, screenplay, . The Sea Hawk is a 1940 American adventure film from Warner Bros that stars Errol Flynn as an English privateer who defends his nation s interests on the eve of the launch of the Spanish Armada The film was the tenth collaboration between Flynn and director Michael Curtiz Its screenplay was written by Howard Koch and Seton I Miller The rousing musical score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold is recognized as a high point in his career The film was both an adventure and a period piece about Elizabethan England s struggles with Spain It was also meant as a deliberately pro British propaganda film to build morale during World War II and to influence the American public into having a more pro British outlook King Philip was presented as an allegorical Hitler 5 The same theme had been visited in Alexander Korda s film Fire Over England released three years earlier before World War II started 6 The Sea HawkFilm posterDirected byMichael CurtizWritten byHoward KochSeton I MillerProduced byHenry BlankeHal B WallisStarringErrol FlynnBrenda MarshallClaude RainsCinematographySol PolitoEdited byGeorge AmyMusic byErich Wolfgang KorngoldDistributed byWarner Bros Release dateJuly 1 1940 1940 07 01 Running time127 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 701 211 1 2 Box office 2 678 000 2 2 million US 3 3 280 538 admissions France 1947 4 Colorized versions of The Sea Hawk were broadcast on American television and distributed on VHS tape in 1986 Only the black and white edited version 109 minutes and the fully restored uncut version 127 minutes have been released on the DVD and Blu ray formats No plans have been announced to release the colorized version on DVD Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 5 Reception 5 1 Critical 5 2 Box office 5 3 1947 re release 6 Awards 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditKing Philip II of Spain declares his intention to destroy England as a first step to world conquest eager to make his empire reach from Northern Europe to China and India He sends Don Alvarez as his ambassador to allay the suspicions of Queen Elizabeth I about the great armada he is building to invade England In England some of the queen s ministers plead with her to build a fleet which she hesitates to do in order to spare the purses of her subjects The ambassador s ship is captured en route to England by the Albatross and her captain Geoffrey Thorpe Don Alvarez and his niece Dona Maria are taken aboard and transported to England Thorpe immediately is enchanted by Dona Maria and gallantly returns her plundered jewels Her detestation of him softens as she too begins to fall in love Don Alvarez is granted an audience with the queen and complains about his treatment Dona Maria is accepted as one of her maids of honour The Sea Hawks a group of English privateers who raid Spanish merchant shipping appear before the queen who scolds them at least publicly for their activities and for endangering the peace with Spain Captain Thorpe proposes in private a plan to seize a Spanish treasure fleet coming back from Spain s colonies in the Americas The queen is wary of Spain s reaction but allows Thorpe to proceed Suspicious Lord Wolfingham one of the queen s ministers and a secret Spanish collaborator sends a spy to try to discover where the Albatross is really heading Upon visiting the chartmaker responsible for drawing the charts for Thorpe s next voyage Don Alvarez and Lord Wolfingham determine that he is sailing to the Isthmus of Panama and order the captain of Don Alvarez s ship to sail ahead to set up an ambush When the Albatross reaches its destination the ship is spotted Thorpe s crew seizes the caravan but fall into a well laid trap and are driven into the swamps Thorpe and a few other survivors return to their ship only to find it in Spanish hands They are taken to Spain tried by the Inquisition and sentenced to life imprisonment as galley slaves In England Don Alvarez informs the queen of Thorpe s fate causing his niece to faint The queen expels him from her court On a Spanish galley Thorpe meets an Englishman named Abbott who was captured trying to uncover evidence of the Armada s true purpose The prisoners manage to take over the ship during the night They board another ship in the harbor where an emissary has stored secret incriminating plans Thorpe and his men sail both ships back to England with the plans Upon reaching port Thorpe tries to warn the queen A carriage bringing Don Alvarez to the ship which unknown to him Thorpe has captured also brings his niece Don Alvarez boards the ship and is held prisoner while Captain Thorpe dressed in the uniform of a Spanish courtier sneaks into the carriage carrying Dona Maria who has decided to stay in England and wait for Thorpe s return The two finally declare their love for each other and Maria helps Thorpe to sneak into the palace However Lord Wolfingham s spy spots Thorpe and alerts the castle guards to stop the carriage and take Thorpe prisoner Thorpe escapes and enters the queen s residence fending off guards all the while Eventually Thorpe runs into Lord Wolfingham and kills the traitor in a swordfight With Dona Maria s assistance Thorpe reaches the queen and provides proof of King Philip s intentions Elizabeth knights Thorpe and declares her intention to build a great fleet to oppose the Spanish threat Cast Edit Flynn c 1940 Errol Flynn as Geoffrey Thorpe Brenda Marshall as Dona Maria Claude Rains as Don Jose Alvarez de Cordoba Donald Crisp as Sir John Burleson Flora Robson as Queen Elizabeth I of England Alan Hale as Carl Pitt Henry Daniell as Lord Wolfingham Una O Connor as Miss Latham Dona Maria s English duenna James Stephenson as Abbott Gilbert Roland as Captain Lopez Don Jose s sea captain William Lundigan as Danny Logan Julien Mitchell as Oliver Scott Montagu Love as King Philip II of Spain J M Kerrigan as Eli Matson David Bruce as Martin Burke Clifford Brooke as William Tuttle Clyde Cook as Walter Boggs Fritz Leiber Sr as Inquisitor Ellis Irving as Monty Preston Francis McDonald as Samuel Kroner Pedro de Cordoba as Captain Mendoza Ian Keith as Peralta Jack La Rue as Lieutenant Ortega as Jack LaRue Halliwell Hobbes as Astronomer Alec Craig as Jodocus Hondius Victor Varconi as General Aguirre Robert Warwick as Captain Frobisher Guy Bellis as Captain Hawkins Harry Cording as Slavemaster Leyland Hodgson as Officer Leo White as Bit Role uncredited Edgar Buchanan as Ben Rollins uncredited Production EditThe portions of the film set in the Americas are tinted sepia 7 The film was announced in June 1936 and would star Errol Flynn then coming off his success with Captain Blood 8 Originally planned as an adaptation of Rafael Sabatini s 1915 novel The Sea Hawk the film used an entirely different story inspired by the exploits of Sir Francis Drake 9 unlike the 1924 silent film adaptation which was fairly faithful to Sabatini s plot which in turn was very similar to the plot of Captain Blood Adaptations of the novel were written by Richard Neville and Delmer Daves before Seton I Miller wrote a basically new story titled Beggars of the Sea based on Sir Francis Drake Sabatini s name was still used in promotional materials however as it was felt it had commercial value Howard Koch then reworked Miller s script while still keeping the basic structure and story 1 10 The speech the queen gives at the close of the film was meant to inspire the viewing British audience which was already in the grip of the Second World War Suggestions that it was the duty of all free men to defend liberty and that the world did not belong to any one man an obvious insinuation of Hitler s wish to conquer Europe were rousing The 2005 Warner Brothers DVD release includes a 1940 Movietone News newsreel of the Battle of Britain the short Alice in Movieland the Looney Tunes cartoon Porky s Poor Fish and a 20 minute featurette The Sea Hawk Flynn in Action about the film s production Music EditThe music was written by composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold When The Sea Hawk opened in theatres a commercial recording was not contemplated It was not until 1962 that a bit of music from the film was released on an LP titled Music by Erich Wolfgang Korngold Ten years later Charles Gerhardt and Korngold s son George included 6 53 minutes of The Sea Hawk score on RCA s album The Classic Film Scores of Erich Wolfgang Korngold A complete re recording was issued in 2007 by the Naxos label recorded with the Moscow Symphony Orchestra and Chorus led by William T Stromberg it and reconstructed by John W Morgan Reception EditCritical Edit Bosley Crowther wrote in The New York Times of 10 August 1940 Of course the film is all historically cockeyed and the amazing exploits of Mr Flynn accomplished by him in the most casual and expressionless manner are quite as incredible as the adventures of Dick Tracy But Flora Robson makes an interesting Queen Elizabeth Claude Rains and Henry Daniell play a couple of villainous conspirators handsomely there is a lot of brocaded scenery and rich Elizabethan costumes and of course there is Brenda Marshall to shed a bit of romantic light And when you come right down to it that s about all one can expect in an overdressed spectacle film which derives much more from the sword than from the pen 11 A review by Time on 19 August 1940 observed that The Sea Hawk Warner is 1940 s lustiest assault on the double feature It cost 1 700 000 exhibits Errol Flynn and 3 000 other cinemactors performing every imaginable feat of spectacular derring do and lasts two hours and seven minutes Produced by Warner s Hal Wallis with a splendor that would set parsimonious Queen Bess s teeth on edge constructed of the most tried amp true cinema materials available The Sea Hawk is a handsome shipshape picture To Irish sic Cinemactor Errol Flynn it gives the best swashbuckling role he has had since Captain Blood For Hungarian Director Michael Curtiz who took Flynn from bit player ranks to make Captain Blood and has made nine pictures with him since it should prove a high point in their profitable relationship 12 Filmink called it pretty close to perfection as these things go 13 This movie has a one hundred percent rating based on twelve critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes Box office Edit The film had been in planning since Errol Flynn s success in the swashbuckler epic Captain Blood 14 According to Warner Bros records the film was Warners most expensive and most popular film of 1940 It made 1 631 000 in the U S and 1 047 000 in other markets 2 Upon release in 1940 the film was among the higher grossing films of the year and in several states including Florida Alabama Georgia South Carolina North Carolina and Virginia it was the highest grossing film of the year and in several others including Tennessee Mississippi Kentucky and Arkansas it was the second highest grossing film of the year coming behind Rebecca 1947 re release Edit The film was re released to great popularity in 1947 10 It was one of the more popular films that screened in France that year 4 Awards EditThe film was nominated for four Academy Awards 15 Art Direction Black and White Anton Grot Original Score Erich Wolfgang Korngold Sound Recording Nathan Levinson Special Effects Byron Haskin Nathan Levinson References Edit a b Behlmer Rudy Balio Tino eds June 15 1982 Introduction The Sea Hawk University of Wisconsin Press p 40 ISBN 978 0299090142 a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Schaefer Ledger See Appendix 1 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 1995 15 sup1 1 31 p 20 DOI 10 1080 01439689508604551 WHICH CINEMA FILMS HAVE EARNED THE MOST MONEY SINCE 1914 Supplement The Argus Weekend magazine The Argus Melbourne 4 March 1944 p 3 Retrieved 6 August 2012 via National Library of Australia a b Box office figures for 1947 France Box Office Story von Tunzelmann Alex 19 March 2021 Glenda Jackson s Elizabeth I embodies a timeless royal quandary duty or desire The Guardian Retrieved 20 March 2021 Hixson Walter L 2003 The American Experience in World War II The United States and the road to war in Europe Volume 1 of The American Experience in World War II Taylor amp Francis pp 30 34 ISBN 9780415940290 Facts about The Sea Hawk Classic Movie Hub CMH WARNERS TO SHOW 60 FEATURE FILMS 1936 37 Production Schedule Announced at Convention in Progress Here GREEN PASTURES LISTED Seven Other Stage Successes to Be Screened Adaptation of Anthony Adverse Ready Amusements The New York Times 4 June 1936 p 27 Kael Pauline May 15 1991 5001 Nights at the Movies Henry Holt and Company p 660 ISBN 0 8050 1367 9 a b Tony Thomas Rudy Behlmer Clifford McCarty The Films of Errol Flynn Citadel Press 1969 p 93 96 New York Times Review Retrieved 13 September 2008 Time Review Retrieved 13 September 2008 Vagg Stephen November 17 2019 The Films of Errol Flynn Part 3 The War Years Filmink McNulty Thomas 2004 Errol Flynn The Life and Career McFarland amp Company p 101 ISBN 9780786417506 The 13th Academy Awards 1941 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 2011 08 13 External links EditThe Sea Hawk at the American Film Institute Catalog The Sea Hawk at IMDb The Sea Hawk at the TCM Movie Database The Sea Hawk at AllMovie DVD Journal review by Mark Bourne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Sea Hawk 1940 film amp oldid 1134900814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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