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Seas Beneath

Seas Beneath (1931)

January. 30,1931
|
5.8
|
NR
| Drama Action War

In the waning days of WWI, a U.S. "Mystery Ship," sets sail for the coast of Spain towing a submarine. Their mission is to find and sink a U-boat that has been especially effective in attacking Allied shipping. Posing as a harmless schooner, the mystery ship is in fact fitted with a formidable gun capable of sinking a U-boat. Stopping in the Canary Islands to refuel, the crew interacts with locals involved with Germans, and with Germans themselves, including the sister of the U-Boat commander, who is lurking offshore waiting for the coming battle.

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Reviews

SpuffyWeb
1931/01/30

Sadly Over-hyped

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Sameer Callahan
1931/01/31

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Deanna
1931/02/01

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

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Caryl
1931/02/02

It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties. It's a feast for the eyes. But what really makes this dramedy work is the acting.

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Robert J. Maxwell
1931/02/03

It has its dull moments. The crew of an American Q ship, a secretly armed three-masted schooner, try to lure a German U-boat within range during World War I. (Kids, that's the one that came before World War II.) Like Gaul, the movie is divided into three parts: (1) The introduction to the characters and the mission; (2) The longish interlude at a port in the Canary Islands where the crew meet the ladies they're not supposed to fraternize with, and the officers of the German U-boat that's tracking them. Each side knows who the other is, but all the conversations are sarcastically polite. The American captain (O'Brien) unwittingly falls for a pretty German spy (Lessing). (3) The final shoot out between the American sailing ship (aided by an American submarine) and the U-boat. Guess who wins.Actually, of course, it's more complicated that that. The pretty German spy's brother commands the U-boat, and she's apparently in love with an officer aboard the boat (Loder, speaking fine German). We get to know some of the American sailors, mostly used for comic relief.It's splendidly photographed in the Channel Islands by Joe August, who was a Hollywood craftsman and one of the best. The production design is impressive. A ship chandler's shop is filled with exactly the kind of junk you'd expect -- irregular piles of cork floats, anchors, and the like. And it seems evident that whatever could be shot at sea WAS shot at sea. Watch a stunt man do a swan dive from an impossible height.Too many of the performances are below par, especially Marion Lessing's, and she has an important part. It isn't that they don't try. It's that they try too hard, as if it were a silent film directed by Cecile B. De Mille. There are roles (and nick names) that would become part of Ford's repertoire. Sometimes, even the actors themselves were carried over into films like "They Were Expendable." The editor, Frank Hull, should be spanked. Several plot developments blindside the viewer. Yes, we see O'Brien giving instructions to the fake "panic party" but, until the shoot out, we didn't know there were TWO panic parties. And the preparations for the final shoot out go on far beyond the point at which we grasp what's happening. Too many shots of O'Brien crouching on the deck, shouting, "Keep your heads down, men!", while the sea begins to wash around their knees.I don't think the friendship between Ford and O'Brien lasted much beyond this film. Sometime in the 30s, they took a tour of Southeast Asia together. Ford was swept up in one of his periodic binges for days and O'Brien was compelled to leave him behind in some port. End of friendship. O'Brien had to wait until "Fort Apache" and "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" before being rehabilitated, fifteen or twenty years, which was the usual period for someone in the director's dog house.It seems long for what it has to say and most of the gags fall flat, but, saints preserve us, it carries you along with the flow.

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MartinHafer
1931/02/04

While there are a few small signs that this film might have been directed by the great John Ford, for the most part there is little about this B-movie that would seem great or inspired. Now I do cut the film SOME slack since it's an early talkie, but compared to the average film of the day, it's still a sub-par film.Most of the problem is the story--it's just written so poorly and the characters are just so gosh-darn stupid that it's hard to enjoy. You KNOW this ain't the brightest ship in the US Navy when BOTH Warren Hymer AND Nat Pendleton serve on it--to actors who specialized in playing thick-headed galoots. In fact, the rest of the crew is amazingly stupid as well--making me feel that the writers sure didn't try very hard for realism. The story is about an old fashion wooden sailing ship that appears to be a merchant ship but really hides a deck gun designed to sink German subs during the waning months of WWI. But the American crew, as I said above, is dumber than a sack of door knobs and I got frustrated at the writing. A great example is when the Captain told them all they were on a top secret mission, so when they go on shore leave, no fraternizing and no liquor--at which point they all went out chasing women and getting drunk. What part of "top secret mission" or "no fraternizing or drinking" didn't they understand?! Then, when tops of German-accented sailors started walking about, no one seemed to even notice!! The writing was strictly B-movie (or worse) and there were so many loose plot threads that I had a hard time watching the film. The only positive thing I noticed about the film is the nice cinematography. Otherwise...yuck.My advice is that if you MUST see it because you are a die-hard Ford fan, then do so by all means. Otherwise, you'd be best to find another--ANY other Ford film.

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Michael_Elliott
1931/02/05

Seas Beneath (1931) ** (out of 4) A U.S. "mystery ship" is sent out to destroy a German U-boat, which has been causing damage to Allied ships. Like many other early sound films, this one here suffers from non-stop talking, which is damaged because the dialogue is just downright stupid and bad. I guess studios would read screenplays and order additional dialogue because this film has so many subplots that I can't help but think they were added to boost up the dialogue. There's a love story between George O'Brien and Marion Lessing, which is just downright stupid and bad. I'm going to guess the relationship between the boat Commander and a possible German spy was meant to add suspense but it never does. Ford really seems bored with these various dialogue scenes because there's never an ounce of energy in them. What really works is the final twenty-minutes when the mystery ship goes up against the U-boat. There's a long sequence where the ship must fall under attack because the sub isn't in their range for a counter attack. This scene here is full of wonderful excitement and some real suspense. The action scenes are all very realistic and Ford really puts the viewer in a mind frame where it feels like you're actually on the ship. Outside of these scenes I'd have to say Ford's direction is pretty weak because it really seems like he's making a silent movie with dialogue. The scenes are really strange to look at and they never really feel like a director use to the sound technology.

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rfkeser
1931/02/06

John Ford's early talkie is not completely satisfying as drama, due to inadequate acting from the juvenile lead and the leading lady, but it is fairly adventurous film-making: much of it is staged on a real boat which is really at sea. This causes problems for the sound recording and the lighting, but gives it an exhilirating, seat-of-the-pants quality. The high point is a surprisingly intense tango sequence in a Canary Islands cantina, almost as memorable as Rita Hayworth and Anthony Quinn's tango in BLOOD AND SAND. All the action sequences are enjoyably handled and George O'Brien agreeably plays the suave captain as a take-charge guy.

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