Souls at Sea
Souls at Sea
NR | 03 September 1937 (USA)
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Souls at Sea Trailers

Michael 'Nuggin' Taylor and Powdah save lives during a sea tragedy in this story about the slave trade on the high seas during 1842.

Reviews
Solidrariol

Am I Missing Something?

Huievest

Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.

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Bluebell Alcock

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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Sienna-Rose Mclaughlin

The movie really just wants to entertain people.

vincentlynch-moonoi

I should begin by admitting a prejudice against sea-going tales. And, my interest in this film almost bit the dust because of that; I found the first 20 or so minutes of the film to be quite a bore.Then, however, the true nature of the tale began to become a bit more obvious, and my interest picked up. This is almost a spy story, albeit about a private effort to stop the lave trade.The cast here is interesting. The most interesting thing about Gary Cooper is that his speech pattern is not his usual. He does a nice job here. The role George Raft has here is totally different than just about anything you've seen him in before. Frances Dee is very good as the love interest and as the point of friction between her admirer (Cooper) and her brother (Henry Wilcoxon), a true slaver. I always thought that Wilcoxon was an actor who deserved better roles, and while he is the villain here, at least it's a good role. Harry Carey has a small role as a sea captain. Robert Cummings is here in his first movie role. Paul Fix has a tiny role as a violinist. Ward Bond and Alan Ladd have uncredited small roles.The shipwreck scenes are quite masterful (with a few glitches in special effects, but not bad for 1937).Highly recommended, just get past the first 20 minutes or so.

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dbdumonteil

I've never seen a bad movie by Henry Hathaway.It was the third time Gary Cooper had worked with this director after two classics "Lives of a Bengal lancer" and "Peter Ibbetson" ."Souls at sea' is perhaps not in the same league but it's an absorbing movie from start to finish.A long flashback,during a long trial,it casts George Raft against type as a romantic sailor who finds redemption by sacrificing himself.Cooper ,when he first appears is not as nice as in his other movies:working on a slave ship where the unfortunate prisoners are whipped to keep them from singing.But further acquaintance shows this:Cooper portrays an educated sailor who quotes Shakespeare ("to be or not to be" isn't it the question the slaves ask themselves?)and who remembers Homer ("beware of Greek presents" ).Can such a man be a slave trader? And can he sacrifice the others' life in order to save his own life during a wreck?;yes the movie includes a "Titanic" in miniature in which the violin plays on.Like in "Bengal lancer",Htahaway does not seem interested in the female character who is decorative,no more,no less.

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jpdoherty

Produced by Paramount Pictures in 1937 SOULS AT SEA is one of the great seafaring stories of Hollywood's Golden Age! A fondly remembered movie by cultists it recently seems to be forgotten somewhat in the DVD age being available only - and for many years on a VHS tape. But it thankfully now has turned up on a region 2 disc in England in a really impressive issue. Splendidly directed by a young Henry Hathaway it was photographed in glorious black & white by Charles Lang Jr.With only one lifeboat left, and too many passengers to be accommodated when a great ship is sinking, it is up to the Captain to decide who is to live and who must surely die. Gary Cooper in one of his most memorable roles plays the part of the man left with this decision. Also in the cast is George Raft in one of the best roles he ever played! As Cooper's friend and buddy - and leaving his tough guy mobster parts behind him - his performance here is quite different and is altogether likable and appealing. His wooing also of the lovely and gentle Olympe Bradna is touching and engaging. Their well written scenes together are heartfelt and sincere! The sinking scenes of the great ship are really well done for its time and immediately brings to mind the spectacle of the sinking of another great ship we all know so well. Others in the well chosen cast are Henry Wilcoxon, Harry Carey, Porter Hall, Paul Fix and watch out for a young Robert Cummings.The female lead is taken by a now wholly forgotten actress Francis Dee. Dee was a popular star in the thirties, appearing in the best version of "Little Women" in 1933 she was also a contender for the plum role of Melanie in "Gone With The Wind". In 1937 (the same year as "Souls At Sea") she starred in the classic western "Wells Fargo" opposite western star Joel McCrea. She had been married to McCrea since 1933 and remained so until his death in 1990. After 57 years of marriage they would remain one of Hollywood's longest unions. Francis Dee died in 2004 at the age of 94! In "Souls At Sea" she plays the sister of slimy villain Henry Wilcoxon who is secretly running a fleet of slave ships and whom Cooper, under secret orders from the British Admiralty, is sworn to put out of business.An excellent film in an excellent DVD transfer that really looks spotless. Evidently they used a brand new print of the picture and it certainly shows. However, it is disappointing that there are no extras not even a trailer. But collectors of vintage classic movies will love it just the same.

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bkoganbing

Paramount was not a studio particularly known for making social commentary in its product. Souls at Sea is an unusual film to come from that particular studio, let alone any studio for very few dealt with the slave trade as an issue.In The Films of Gary Cooper book it mentions that as elaborate as this production was, Paramount had budgeted Souls at Sea for a lot more. Apparently whole sequences involving Cooper's original rescue by the slave ship, a ball at Queen Victoria's court, and some scenes involving capturing slaves were left out. In some lists both Alan Ladd and Ward Bond were listed in the cast and their scenes were edited out.What they left though is both a rousing sea saga and a story about the immorality and inhumanity of the slave trade. It begins in a courtroom where Gary Cooper is on trial for murder on the high seas. A verdict is about to be handed down when George Zucco interrupts the proceedings as a representative of the British government. He tells the court Cooper's real story and the film unfolds in flashback.George Raft is surprisingly good here, usually he's not when he's not either dancing or being a gangster as Cooper's friend. Frances Dee is one pretty Victorian heroine and sister of British officer Henry Wilcoxon who has an agenda all his own.I wasn't surprised to learn that Boris Morros's score for Souls at Sea got an Academy Award nomination. It is particularly lovely and poignant.The climax of the film is a shipwreck at sea and Cooper's actions therein. He has to make some grisly choices, some of the same ones as was previously pointed out that Tyrone Power made in Abandon Ship.The beginning of the film has Gary Cooper seizing an opportunity to save some Africans from becoming slaves. The climax has him saving some other lives in a shipwreck. The point that Director Henry Hathaway was trying to make is that as human beings all of them had an immortal soul and none deserved to be the property of another. The lives saved at the beginning and the end were just as valuable.Souls at Sea holds up well today as good action entertainment with a profound message.

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