We've all had the experience of tuning in to our favorite channel, intending to quickly turn our attention to more pressing things, and instead get sucked in for the duration. That is what happened to me recently when TCM was airing A Night to Remember, a movie I'd never seen. When I tuned in, the Titanic had just impacted the iceberg, and I was hooked almost immediately. I couldn't wait until the film popped up on TCM's streaming platform so I could watch from the beginning. After that, I knew I had my subject for the Classic Movie Blog Association's Tearjerker Blogathon.
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A Night to Remember (1958) Director: Roy Ward Baker Starring: Kenneth More, Honor Blackman, David McCallum, and a deep ensemble cast |
Fans of James Cameron's blockbuster Titanic (1997) will inevitably draw comparisons. While Cameron's film is glossy, huge, extra-long, and melodramatic, A Night to Remember is none of those things. It's actually better.
Made by England's Rank Organisation, the source is the book of the same name by American author and historian Walter Lord, who brought the tragedy vividly to life for a new generation, based on interviews with dozens of survivors. The screenwriter was Eric Ambler, a thriller specialist who penned hits like Oliver Twist, Topkapi, and a smattering of 1940s noir including The Mask of Dimitrios and Journey into Fear.
Ambler's script weaves several narrative threads illustrating challenges confronting various groups of characters: the men running the ship: Captain Smith (Laurence Naismith), Second Officer Charles Lightoller (Kenneth More) and other crew; the telegraph operators Jack Phillips (Kenneth Griffith) and Harold Bride (David McCallum); many of the notable wealthy passengers: "unsinkable" Molly Brown (Tucker McGuire), Benjamin Guggenheim (Harold Goldblatt), and Isidor and Ida Straus (Meier Tzelniker and Helen Misener); White Star Line Chief J. Bruce Ismay (Frank Lawton); Titanic architect Thomas Andrews (Michael Goodliffe); the chief baker (George Rose), drunk for comic relief; and fictionalized characters from all levels of the ship: a newlywed couple, a group of Irish passengers in steerage looking to escape the sinking ship, the stokers and other workers at the ships engines, and a family with three young children. Importantly, the script jumps between the events unfolding on the Titanic and the drama taking place on the neighboring ship Carpathia, whose Captain Rostron (Anthony Bushell) jumped into action to rescue those survivors who managed to get into lifeboats, and the closer Californian, whose crew tragically ignored (or missed) wires and flares from Titanic.
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Kenneth Griffith (left) and David McCallum as telegraph operators Phillips and Bride grow increasingly concerned as their distress calls go unheeded. (Bride survived, Phillips didn't.) |
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Kenneth More (center) is seen with the smoking room in the background. Every architectural detail is authentic to the extent possible through meticulous research. |
I've always been moved by the power of repressed emotion. For example, two more recently made movies that hit me hard were understated: The Winslow Boy (1999) and Brokeback Mountain (2005). A Night to Remember fits that mold, as it is a film deeply rooted in mid-century "stiff-upper-lip" British sensibility. And the fact that the script touches on the experiences of so many of the thousands involved in the tragedy keeps one from getting too invested in a single storyline or relationship (a la Jack and Rose in the Cameron film); the film's devastating effect comes from a series of "small cuts" that require top-notch acting to be cumulatively effective.
Through this lens of short, understated moments, I found a few scenes especially moving. A father (John Merivale), made aware of the ship's fate, arranges to get his wife (Honor Blackman) and three children to safety while hiding from them his knowledge that he will never see them again. In one scene, he gently places what looks like an heirloom necklace around his wife's neck before waking the children. A bit later, the camera captures him looking on in devastation as he is about to pass his sleeping son to safety in the lifeboats with his wife and daughters. And then he manages to smile at them while waving so they don't see his fear. While fictional, these characters represent the fate of many families as detailed by survivors in Lord's book.
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In a tender scene, Mr. Lucas (John Merivale) places a precious necklace around his wife's (Honor Blackman) neck. |
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Lucas (Merivale) about to pass his sleeping son into a lifeboat. |
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Cellist (actor unknown) sings "Nearer My God To Thee" |
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A little boy cries out for his mother (John Martin?--I was unable to confirm the actor's identity). |
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Lightoller (Kenneth More, center) is shown to fight back tears aboard the Carpathia. |
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Captain Smith (Laurence Naismith) realizes his night, and his life, will soon be ending. |
Finally, the film slyly but directly confronts the class distinctions and prejudices that contributed to disproportionate numbers of steerage passengers, mostly immigrants in search of better lives, perishing.
NY Times famed critic Bosley Crowther dropped his usual snark in favor of a sincere, favorable review, which highlighted how well the film asked viewers to consider the true nature of this tragedy:
"(the film) is given as fine and convincing an enactment as anyone could wish—or expect....it puts the story of the great disaster in simple human terms and yet brings it all into a drama of monumental unity and scope."
I've seen the 1950s Titanic, but not this one. It looks like I missed out! Thank you for describing what makes it so effective. Understatement is certainly the right approach for dramatizing this tragedy--the simple facts do so much. I'll check it out. Thank you for alerting me to it!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! It's certainly worth spending your time on, and the movie on the Criterion disc looks fabulous, and you'd expect. I will admit to not having watched the 1950s Titanic, and I need to sometime soon. I've heard it's entertaining, too, perhaps in a different way than this one. Thanks for stopping by!
DeleteI really must see this one again. Had forgotten about how much better it is than the Cameron one. You have highlighted this so we'll. I just watched SOS Titanic recently which used some footage of the boat from this and colourised it. You so had me sobbing with the story about the wee boy too.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by! If you do watch this one, I'd like to hear your comparisons with the 1979 film. I wasn't aware of that one, but it looks interesting! I like the cast.
DeleteIt seems it was quite common to reuse footage then. Even A Night To Remember used old newsreel footage of other large liners to fill in.
Really enjoyed the read, Jocelyn. This is my favourite Titanic film and it is undoubtedly the best made so far about the disaster.
ReplyDeleteMaddy from Classic Film And TV Corner
Thanks so much, Maddy. It really is a terrific film, and I was so surprised at how I responded when I came across it randomly on TV. So good to know that the other Titanic films that I haven't seen won't surpass this one.
DeleteYes, it's a great movie. I saw it when it came out! And many times again. You may remember that the opening is in the first section of my compilation. It captures the British calm in the face of disaster so beautifully and tells so many stories at once. I remember the Brattle showed it the night that Titanic won the Oscar, but I couldn't talk my son into driving up from RI for it.
ReplyDeleteHi David, wow, I had forgotten about this being in your compilation, but as you say, it deserves to be there...beautiful indeed and skillfully rendered all around. Was the Brattle making a statement, screening it on Oscar night, or did they just want to cash in on Titanic fever?
DeleteThanks so much for reading and taking the time to comment!
I suppose the Brattle might have been saying, if you want to see a real movie about the Titanic--this is it!!
DeleteI can believe that :-)
DeleteWhat a great choice! I agree this film is so far superior to the Cameron version in terms of emotional impact. Almost like a documentary, the personal stories interwoven with the real life events makes this exceptional - and one that can just move you to tears.
ReplyDeleteThank you! You are right about the documentary feel of this one...I think it has to do with the black-and-white cinematography and the intricate weaving of so many narrative threads. It's a "classic-era" movie that demonstrates why classic movies are so worthy of being sought out...it's so good!
DeleteThanks for reading, Marsha!
Also, from the time the ship hits the iceberg, it's practically in real time.
DeleteI've had this film on my list for ages. What an incredible cast it has. Beautiful post! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! I hope it doesn’t disappoint! One down side about writing so much about a film is that it can generate some familiarity that make take away from a first-time viewing.
DeleteThis sounds a-maz-ing. I'm going to track it down, because it sounds SO much better than the Jack-and-Rose-and-James-Cameron production. Your review nearly made me weepy, and I'll have the tissue ready when I watch this film.
ReplyDeleteI hope you find it as enriching as I did! And it is definitely not like the Cameron film, lol. Thanks so much for stopping by!
DeleteThis movie is awesome! It's so cool getting to see David McCallum as Harold Bride, and Kenneth Moore was fantastic.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the validation! This one really astonished me as I didn’t know anything about it. A great cast and superb performances all around.
DeleteI love this selection for the Tearjerker blogathon. It's not about pain suffered by one person or by a romantic couple, but by the thousands on the ship. I've never seen this film, but your descriptions of scenes with individual characters are quite moving and got to me. You start your story with the bold statement this is better than Cameron's "Titanic" and then you deftly explain why you stay that - and you made a believer out of me. I'm looking forward to watching this now.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Toni, you definitely "got" what I was trying to say about this film. It exemplifies all the things that make me a fan of the movies.
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