Entertainment Magazine

Down with the Ship

Posted on the 27 August 2017 by Sjhoneywell
Films: Titanic (1953)
Format: DVD from Northern Illinois University Founders Memorial Library on rockin’ flatscreen. Down with the Ship

When it comes to movies, Titanic typically means the 1997 James Cameron film. The 1953 film that covers the same ship sinking is pretty much forgotten these days despite its winning the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay that year. While this version doesn’t have the tremendous special effects of Cameron’s epic, it does have many of the same beats, and of course it also has a huge ship sinking in the northern Atlantic. It also does this in a spare 98 minutes, almost 100 fewer than Cameron’s film.

We’ll get to the ship sinking by the end of the movie, of course. Since we as the audience know that the ship is going down, it lends that same aura of tragedy and inevitability over everything else that happens. There’s one main drama aboard the ship and a few others that dip in now and then as minor distractions. That main drama concerns Julia Sturges (Barbara Stanwyck), who has boarded the ship with her daughter Annette (Audrey Dalton) and her young son Norman (Harper Carter). She meets a few friends as the ship boards who question why her husband is not traveling with them.

We find out soon enough. Richard Sturges (Clifton Webb) is suddenly desperate to board the ship, but there have been no tickets for a month. He finds a Basque family boarding in steerage, hoping to come to the United States to start a small winery in California. He offers to give them a substantial amount of money for one of their tickets, and the father agrees, planning on taking the next boat across. Richard boards, finds a friend to borrow some clothing, and keeps his presence on board a secret until he surprises his wife at dinner.

The upshot is that Julia is running away with the kids because she is tired of their life bouncing around Europe. She wants the kids to have some stability and, more than that, wants them to have a real life that isn’t all pretense and parties. He objects, naturally, wanting the children to have the life he wants for them. They decide that Annette is old enough to make her own decisions and she decides to return to Europe with her father. Julia insists on keeping Norman with her, something to which Richard continues to object until she tells him that Norman is not his son, but the product of a one-night stand during one of their many arguments.

Surrounding this are a few other stories. One concerns a young American college student named Giff Rogers (Robert Wagner), who becomes enamored of Annette from the first moment he sees her. She, having been trained by her father, is cold and distant to someone who is clearly below her social standing, but eventually falls for his charms. We also encounter Maude Young (Thelma Ritter), a wealthy woman of more humble origins along the lines of Molly Brown. A social climber named Earl Meeker (Allyn Joslyn) makes a nuisance of himself with the wealthy crowd. Finally, a defrocked alcoholic priest (Richard Basehart) shows up now and then to make boozy moral pronouncements.

Everything is pretty much concerned with these stories through much of the first parts of the film, with only the occasional reference to icebergs spotted by other ships coming to the captain (Brian Aherne), who summarily dismisses them until the moment when the iceberg strikes the ship. We’ll get a few romantic moments, some tearful pronouncements, a few acts of cowardice and a few more of bravery before the ship goes down. What we won’t get is a great deal of resolution on many of the stories.

That’s one of the problems with this version of Titanic. Almost everything except for the stories that directly concern the Sturges feel like they don’t get a great deal of play. Even here, the only stories that seem to matter are the battle between Julia and Richard and the suddenly strained relationship between Richard and Norman once Richard discovers that Norman is not really his son. The romance between Giff and Annette seems to be here simply because we expect it and not for any real reason. It’s not that there’s no chemistry between the actors, but that there is no real chemistry between the characters, or any reason beyond some mild physical attraction for them to be made into a couple.

The rest of the stories are almost completely ignored. We know virtually nothing about Maude Young, for instance, other than that she made a lot of money despite a simple upbringing and that she really likes to play bridge. That’s it—that’s her whole biography. About the other characters, we don’t get a great deal more.

Any movie about this ship is going to live or die with the sinking, of course. This is where this version of Titanic falls quite short. I don’t expect the same sort of spectacle that we got in Cameron’s film. Special effects came quite a long way in the four and a half decades between the two movies, so there were limitations that I expected. What I didn’t expect was for it to look as cheap as it does. I can live with the ship clearly being a model. What seems harder to forgive is how obviously the ice in the water around the lifeboats is Styrofoam.

So, ultimately, the story is good, but moves far too quickly. The sinking, which should be the centerpiece of the film, comes across as a bit shoddy. I imagine it was a lot more impressive before 1997, but today, it doesn’t hold up. Still, it’s hard for me to be entirely disappointed in anything Barbara Stanwyck ever did on the screen.

Why to watch Titanic: A big ship sinks. That’s always compelling.
Why not to watch: The special effects were done in someone’s bathtub.


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