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Reviews Want Empire film reviews on your iPhone?
STAR RATINGS EXPLAINED
5 Stars Classic
4 Stars Excellent
3 Stars Good
2 Stars Fair
1 Star Tragic

FILM DETAILS
Certificate
PG
Cast
Gregory Peck
Richard Basehart
Leo Genn
James Robertson Justice.
Directors
John Huston.
Screenwriters
Ray Bradbury
John Huston.
Running Time
116 minutes


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Moby Dick (PG)

Plot
A young seaman recounts the tale of his first voyage, with the dreaded peg-legged Captain Ahab whose obsessive search for the white whale Moby Dick, who took his limb, will reap disaster.

Review

What brave soul would ever attempt to adapt this treasure, widely considered the Great American Novel, rippling with subtext and laborious with detail? Why John Huston, of course, that erstwhile Ahab of American directing. Sadly, it proves even beyond his grand designs, and the voluminous tide of Herman Melville’s great, creaking ship of a book are reduced to a colourful odyssey of man striving against the forces of nature in the shape of a white whale. Casting Gregory Peck as the immortal Ahab was a brave decision, but one so synonymous with the genteel humanity of Atticus Finch could never truly ferment the venom of this crusading vision of blind obsession. It’s a good effort, but he embodies the film’s weakness, always a shadow of something far greater.
 

Filleted from the 600 pages by sci-fi author Ray Bradbury and Huston himself, the script does, at least, keep the first person narrative — Richard Basehart plays the callow youth through whose eyes we look, and gets to spout the most famous opening line in literary history: “Call me Ishmael.” He, for those who have read the book (or pretended to) will hook up with enigmatic harpoonist Queequeg (Frederick Ledebur), who will play guardian as they set sail on the legendary whaler The Pequod. Meanwhile, Huston works hard to invest what is fast becoming a sturdy enough adventure tale with some of the book’s religious foreboding and grand metaphors (Moby Dick is America!). A booming Orson Welles turns up for a cameo as a mordant preacher seeing the men off to battle with the ocean, and many of Ahab’s Biblical cant is kept intact from the novel. But the authenticity of the seafaring and the magnificent modelwork finally diminish any opportunity for greater meaning. The film takes flight as a grand chase movie, and leaves its ambition in its wake.

Verdict
Who could ever buy Atticus Finch as the demonic Ahab driven by hellfire to hunt down that dreaded white whale?


Reviewer: Ian Nathan

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Your Reviews
Average user rating for Moby Dick
Empire Star Rating

Empire User Rating

Genius! This is possibly the most bizarre films I have ever seen. ... Read More

corbennic About me
20:39, 07 September 2009 | Report This Post

Empire User Rating

Genius! This is possibly the most bizarre films I have ever seen. ... Read More

corbennic About me
20:39, 07 September 2009 | Report This Post

RE: Moby Dick

r’s review seems a fair and reasonable account of the film. e=2] e=2]I do however, understand the criticism of Gregory Peck. His character seems too young and not nearly tortured enough to do Ahab full justice.e=2] k obsesses about the religious significance of everything. You get a flavour of that with this film too, with superstition seamlessly blended in as well. Orson Wells awesome cameo as the preacher sets up and supports this important plot element. Important because, this is how m... Read More

zenon About me
10:32, 17 February 2006 | Report This Post

Moby Dick
Empire User Rating

The journey on board the Pequod is retold by young sailor Ishmael (Richard Basehart). From his wandering the valley to a sea-port to finding work on the whale ship to the sea trip is drawn out in great detail. Under the leadership of the allusive Captain Ahab (Gregory Peck), the ship one main purpose is to track down and kill a giant white whale that Ahab has been obsessing about for years. John Huston makes a brave attempt at Herman Meville's epic novel, and succeeds in the most part. The fi... Read More

wrenster About me
13:34, 16 February 2006 | Report This Post

DVD Extras
Moby Dick
Released: 10 May 2004
Moby Dick Trailer

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