Review: In the Heart of the Sea
Author
Herman Melville (Ben Whishaw) visits an elderly Tom Nickerson (Brendan
Gleeson), hoping to get the scoop on what happened on the voyage of the Essex
in the early 1800s. The crux of the film flashes back to tell the story of the
voyage in search of whale oil, and particular the stressful relationship
between first-mate Owen Chase (Chris Hemsworth) and rich, but far less
experienced captain George Pollard (Benjamin Walker), who thoroughly resents
the former’s input. Storms, starvation, and petty stubbornness ensues. Michelle
Fairley plays Nickerson’s wife, Tom Holland plays the young Nickerson, and
Cillian Murphy plays the second-mate.
Based
on a novel from 2000 by Nathaniel Philbrick, this 2015 seafaring flick from
director Ron Howard (“Parenthood”, “Backdraft”, “Apollo 13”,
“Ransom”) tells the story of author Herman Melville’s chief inspiration
in writing the classic “Moby Dick”. I’ve read neither Melville’s novel
nor Philbrick’s, but as scripted by Charles Leavitt (“The Mighty”, and
the excellent “Blood Diamond”) this is a film of two distinct halves.
The first half is a boring re-tread of every seafaring adventure you’ve ever
seen, and the second half is even more boring as things aboard the ship turn
from clichéd class/rank politics into rather unpleasant survival story clichés
that aren’t any more interesting. I was expecting something a lot better than
this. I know all seafaring flicks operate on some clichés, but this one seems
to operate on all of them.
It’s
also thoroughly unconvincing, right down to whatever the fuck accent Chris
Hemsworth was attempting. I think it was meant to be a Bostonian accent
(apparently Nantucket, to be precise), but if so, he monumentally botches it in
a bunch of different ways throughout. Seriously, he has horrendous navigation
skills when it comes to that accent, it’s like a bad “SNL” parody,
something I seem to say a lot about Hemsworth and his accents. If it weren’t
for “Rush” (a much better Ron Howard film), I’d start to wonder if he’s just
a shit actor. I get that no one has much of an idea of what someone would’ve
sounded like early 1800s Nantucket, but Hemsworth never convinced me for a
second that they would sound remotely like him.
Everyone else’s accent sounds either flat and neutral, or like they’re doing a
really bad RFK impersonation. Even the otherwise very fine (but wasted) Brendan
Gleeson has a wavering accent of indistinct locality.
The
film looks extremely attractive as shot by Anthony Dod Mantle (“Slumdog
Millionaire”, “127 Hours”, “Rush”), but even that has its
downside. Yes, the images are stunning, but there’s a few moments here and
there where the green screen is completely obvious. Gorgeous, but
artificial-looking, with some scenes seemingly shot through a slightly
green-tinged filter that probably ought to be more blue (that’s nit-picking,
though). Some of the later scenes are a bit too washed-out for my liking too,
but honestly, visuals are not this film’s major issue, I really am nit-picking
in that regard. The stormy scenes in particular are absolutely frightening, the
best thing about the entire film, though the CGI dolphins and whales are fairly
convincing to my eyes, too. On an action level, it definitely delivers from
time to time, too. I just wish I cared, and that comes down to scripting and
acting. With everyone seeming as though they’re merely acting in a seafaring
adventure rather than convincingly inhabiting their characters, and a look that
while gorgeous, is artificial…it’s hard to be pulled in. When you add the
abundance of story and character clichés, you’re kept at even more of a
distance. I mean, no matter its basis in history/literature, do we really need
another character dynamic of the wannabe captain forced to serve under a less
experienced, rich kid who immediately rubs everyone the wrong way? Practically
every film of this type has a similar dynamic going on (“Mutiny on the
Bounty”, even), usually done more convincingly. Hell, even the film’s climax
echoes the earlier “Wreck of the Mary Deare”.
Unconvincing
seafaring flick eventually turns into an unconvincing tale of survivalism, and
plays like a bad “SNL” sketch about ‘old-timey’ people for the most
part. Beautiful, but artificial and dull. I found myself letting it all wash
over me a bit after a while. Massive disappointment from a usually fairly
reliable filmmaker.
Rating:
C
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