Adapted by novelist Eric Ambler from Walter Lord’s non-fiction account of the sinking of the
Titanic and directed by Roy Ward Baker,
A Night to Remember – now available in a newly remastered DVD print from Criterion – is a small classic of understated English filmmaking. It has an enormous cast, and the crowd scenes are impressively staged (and, in the moments when the passengers who haven’t been hoisted onto the inadequate number of lifeboats begin to panic, tense and frightening), but Baker manages to retain a feeling of intimacy. He works modestly, focusing as much as possible on individual characters and details. In the 1997
Titanic, James Cameron took three hours plus to tell a preposterously fictionalized version of the story – almost twice as long as it took the ocean liner to sink. Baker’s film is two-thirds the length of Cameron’s, most of it in real time, and he doesn’t make things up. He doesn’t need to, since the truth is far more dramatic and moving than anything Cameron could devise.
The true-life narrative provides its own terrifying
structure and Baker resists the urge to punch it up. The film has a mournful
inevitability, and most of the poignant moments come from the characters’
acceptance of the fate of the ship and their own fate along with it. Captain
Smith (Laurence Naismith), whose girth and beard already give him a regal look,
takes on the aura of one of Shakespeare’s tragic English kings as it becomes
apparent that the nearest ship, the
Californian, which they can clearly
see at a distance, isn’t responding to their distress signals, and the next
closest, the
Carpathia, can’t make it to them in less than four hours.
The
Titanic’s engineer, Thomas Andrews (Michael Goodliffe), is the one
who delivers the bad news soberly and without much affect in his voice, but his
feeling is in his wide eyes – and, of course, in his behavior. As the ship
begins to list, he goes below to the now-deserted ballroom and awaits the end.
There’s the card sharp (George Rose) who continues playing solitaire; he tells
the second officer, Charles Lightoller (Kenneth More) – the closest the film
has to a protagonist – that they’ve simply drawn a bad hand. Isidor Strauss
(Meier Tzelniker) and his wife Ida (Helen Misener), who refuses to leave his
side, stand faithfully on deck; their distinctly Jewish brand of fatalism mixed
with warmth is juxtaposed with the gentlemanly conduct of the most famous
financier on board, Benjamin Guggenheim (Harold Goldblatt). Guggenheim removes
his life jacket because it’s uncomfortable and undignified, and his valet, who
stays with him, emulates his master at the end of his life as he’s presumably
done throughout it. And the orchestra, led by the violinist
Wallace
Hartley (Charles Belchier), moves out on deck and plays as the lifeboats
are lowered and even afterwards, finally striking up “Nearer, My God, to Thee.”
On the other hand, Jack Phillips (Kenneth Griffith), the wireless operator,
refuses to accept the futility of sending Morse code, though his assistant,
Harold Bride, practically drags him away from his desk; it’s only the attempt
of a marauder to steal one of their life jackets that distracts Phillips from
what he perceives, more and more desperately, to be his duty. (A very young
David McCallum, half a dozen years away from his TV hit
The Man from U.N.C.L.E., plays Bride.)
|
Robbie Lucas (John Merrivale) talks to Captain Smith |
One of my favorite scenes displays the limitations of
English reserve. John Merivale who plays Robbie Lucas, one of the aristocrats,
asks Captain Smith straight out for the truth about the ship’s condition very
shortly after they hit the iceberg, assuring him that he isn’t the sort who
panics. Then he returns to his cabin and informs his wife quietly that she has
to wake their young children and get them ready for the lifeboats. He insists
that she can’t remain with him and assures her that he’ll be along later,
though the look they exchange belies his words. He’s cheerful as he bids her
and his two little girls goodbye, but he holds onto his son – who has fallen
asleep in his arms – for a moment longer, kissing him and murmuring an
endearment. This is the only scene in the movie, I believe, that encompasses
anything like conventional sentiment, and because it’s unique and plays against
the held-in-check emotion of every other scene (including Robbie’s other
scenes), of course it doesn’t feel conventional at all (or sentimental).
Cameron’s Titanic
whipped up a lot of nonsense about class, inventing a working-class hero
(Leonardo DiCaprio) to steal the heroine (Kate Winslet) away from her sneering,
underhanded aristocratic fiancĂ© (Billy Zane). It’s the most offensive item in
the movie because so many of the wealthy on board the ship behaved courageously
and unselfishly. Baker and Ambler’s class commentary is subtle, authentic, and
far more revealing. In one scene (before most people on board realize the
direness of the situation) some steerage passengers from Belfast play street
hockey with slabs of ice while a couple from first class watches from above, he
with envy at the fun they appear to be having. (He wants to join in, but his
wife won’t permit him to mix with the working class.) When the lifeboats are
being filled one of the stewards keeps the steerage passengers below, but some
of the Irish break away and sneak up, suddenly finding themselves in the
ballroom. “First class!” one of the women whispers, and they linger for a
moment, awestruck at this illicit glimpse of a life they’ve only imagined. At
the other end of the spectrum is Molly Brown (Tucker McGuire), the low-born
American who climbed effortlessly into the upper class when her husband struck
gold but retained her western rural unpretentiousness all her life. It’s she
who offers to help out the seamen in her lifeboat by picking up an oar (and
volunteering other women in the boat to help) and she who is resolute that they
turn around and steer closer to the tipping ship so that they can pack the tiny
space with more survivors. It’s an inspiriting moment. All told, A Night to Remember makes you feel
pretty good about humanity.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review, The Boston Phoenix and The Christian Century and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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