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Master and
Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003)
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the
World is refreshingly, and wonderfully, old-fashioned.
Russell Crowe fills the screen, but not too much, in director Peter Weirs big, lush,
historically detailed yarn based on novelist Patrick OBrians well-respected
series that chronicles the British Navy during the Napoleonic wars. While the films
action is based mostly on the tenth volume, The
Far Side of the World, its spirit is drawn from the characters first introduced
in Master
and Commander.
Crowe plays Capt. Jack "Lucky" Aubrey; Paul Bettany is the
ships doctor and Aubreys friend, Stephen Maturin. While the actors are fine in
their roles, theyre only as admirable as Weirs gorgeous seascapes, booming
battle scenes, topsy-turvy storms and exotic locales. The frigate HMS Surprise is equally
majestic, being the main setting of this classy, classic adventure, which is set in 1805
and takes its sailor warriors all the way from the coast of Brazil to the Galapagos
Islands the real ones.
Crowe portrays his most likable character yet. Not overly noble, stoic,
grandiose or ornery as he has been in Gladiator
or A Beautiful Mind (in
which he also shared the screen with Bettany), Crowe shades the captain with fine-tuned
subtleties. Hes brave in battle and tough with his men, sometimes extraordinarily
so. To set a proper example, he flogs one subordinate for simply for failing to salute. On
another occasion, he assails a midshipman for displaying indecision. Aubrey remains
strong, even when he faces the first dramatic defeats of his successful naval career in
his singular mission to destroy the enemy French ship, the Acheron.
The military goal pretty much constitutes the extent of the films
plot and that works just fine. At the outset, the Acheron, a bigger, stronger vessel with
a larger crew, attacks the Surprise in a particularly one-sided battle. But in
unconventional action, instead of going home to repair and restock his ship, Aubrey
directs the crew to restore the frigate while at sea. Still, Aubrey isnt wholly
unreasonable. He delights in the company of his senior officers, inviting them to jovial
meals in his private quarters and paying distinct attention to he crews younger
members, most specifically an able, articulate boy, Lord Blakeney (Max Perkis), who lost
his father, one of Aubreys former colleagues.
The ships widely varied population, from the privileged, educated
officers down to gunners residing below the deck, is vividly shown, even though the folks
at central casting selected a crew that could look a little more like scruffy 19th-century
seafarers and less like gleaming Los Angeles extras. Weir and co-screenwriter John Collee,
however, take great pains to make the dialogue appropriately formal. The men, perpetually
addressing each other as "mister" and "sir," happily don't sound like
anyone from the 21st century.
Weir and Collee reveal Aubrey's humanity most in the friendship between
the impetuous captain and his bookish old pal, which gives the film its appealing
emotional center. Behind closed doors, Jack and Steven clearly enjoy each others
company, getting together to play rousing cello and violin duets. Aubrey even goes so far
as to entertain criticism from his pal when Maturin questions his decisions. At the same
time, the captain indulges the doctors obsession with natural history, agreeing to
make island stops so Maturin can collect valuable wildlife specimens. (The visit to the
Galapagos showcases those famed tortoises, whose heads look eerily like E.T.)
Folks who arent experts in nautical history arent likely to
find fault with the films meticulous attention to detail. Particularly fascinating
are the medical scenes, which arent too gruesome, but do show how a shipboard
amputation or a brain surgery was handled 200 years ago. The period of inaction is
handled with delicacy, too. Even when the sailors arent immediately faced with the
prospect of battle, theyre subject to the whims of nature, and long stretches
without wind and water make life for the crew just about as impossible as being under
attack.
Nicely balanced, Master and Commander successfully mixes
action, adventure and history with characters that are succinctly, competently developed.
Theres something for everybody, even for those wholl go just to see Crowe in
that white ruffled shirt.
- Leslie Katz