Moby Dick Youghal 1954

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 203

  • @Confused_Philosopher
    @Confused_Philosopher 2 года назад +19

    I loved this movie when I was young. I saw it 55 years ago as a child.

  • @franktheo2055
    @franktheo2055 3 года назад +47

    You couldn't pick a better actor than Royal Dano to play the character Elijah.

    • @josephpravda9452
      @josephpravda9452 3 года назад +3

      Resembles Caradine, but 'tis Dano

    • @franktheo2055
      @franktheo2055 3 года назад +9

      @@josephpravda9452 Yep, he even resembled Gregory Peck. When you see Royal Dano on the 1956 classic Moby Dick he had a 2 minute role but played a major part foreseeing the ill fated voyage of the Pequod & its crew. And there was no better actor to have portrayed Queequeg than Friedrich von Ledebur. Cool Stuff.

    • @sorenlilienthal1368
      @sorenlilienthal1368 2 года назад +6

      It may be of interest, that Richard Basehart and Royal Dano were supporting actors together in "Gunsmoke", some time (10 to 15 years, perhaps) later, as a captain and his mate, who buy a ranch outside of Dodge City.

    • @franktheo2055
      @franktheo2055 2 года назад +1

      @@sorenlilienthal1368 I gotta look up that Gunsmoke episode. Admiral Harriman Nelson was the best ! And there was no better Queequeg and Elijah than Friedrich von Ledebur & Royal Dano on this 1956 classic.. I've seen movie remakes of Moby Dick and they all pale in comparison. Be Well - 🐋🦑

  • @Pob76
    @Pob76 5 лет назад +44

    Peck! Born to play this part nobody will improve on this performance.

    • @Jabberwockybird
      @Jabberwockybird 2 года назад

      Except maybe Ricardo Montalbon

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 2 года назад +4

      Peck didn't like his performance. And I seem to recall one unkind critic commented that it was as wooden as his leg.

    • @Jabberwockybird
      @Jabberwockybird 2 года назад +1

      @@Wotsitorlabart Nostalgia makes a wooden performance great in many people's eyes.

    • @franknberry6397
      @franknberry6397 2 года назад +1

      I think it is fantastic! Many critics panned it.

    • @anton1990
      @anton1990 Год назад +1

      @@franknberry6397
      What do critics know? People who become critics are those who could never be creators themselves. Peck was brilliant as Ahab.

  • @veramae4098
    @veramae4098 2 года назад +18

    About 30 years ago I decided to read one "classic" book every year. Self discipline, right?
    It's been a great 30 years!
    Moby Dicks was AWESOME.

    • @jackiereynolds2888
      @jackiereynolds2888 2 года назад

      My wife complained that when she read it, - the book was very little story, and it otherwise would go on and on and on all about the occupation and all of the different things that made a whaling craft. Needless to say she did not care for the book at all.
      But Ishmael made clear this very point even before signing aboard; he said to the Mate that the reason he wanted to go was too learn what it meant to hunt whales ! - so of course the pages are going to teach the reader about the ship, about the skills needed, and about everything aboard and what it was used for.
      I think it absolutely awesome that you decided to take to classic literature.
      You know I am sure the comment by Twain regarding classics; He said that generally, people referred to the Classics as those literary works that everyone praised - but nobody ever read !
      I am curious as to which among them all happen to be your personal favorites.

    • @mjp152
      @mjp152 2 года назад

      What has been your favorite classic so far?

    • @jamisonescott2300
      @jamisonescott2300 Год назад

      Herman Melville needed a good editor. Unfortunately, he did not have one.

    • @panzerabwerkanone
      @panzerabwerkanone 3 месяца назад

      @@jackiereynolds2888 It was basically Herman Melville telling his own experience as a whaler. Inspired by the tale of a whale called Mocha Dick and the whaleship Essex which was attacked and sunk by a whale in 1820.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 2 года назад +22

    This movie was way ahead of the curve for realism in a time when it wasn't vogue to do so. You can almost smell the sea air and the musty smells of working sailors, tobacco, hemp rope, canvas and wood. Definitely a hard set of men that also appreciated the small light hearted moments.

    • @oldtimedrumcorps
      @oldtimedrumcorps 2 года назад +3

      Read ; " Two Years before the Mast" a classic by Richard Henry Dana . You describe the sailors as the actually were !

    • @jackiereynolds2888
      @jackiereynolds2888 2 года назад +2

      I kinda jumped when late that first night when Ishmael was asleep in bed,
      and all-of-a-sudden 'Queequeg' just walks in and hangs up his belongings and just gets right into bed with Ishmael,- that would freak anyone out !

    • @harrykadaras9459
      @harrykadaras9459 2 года назад +1

      The realism is almost magical. The singing is remarkable. Men were truly something back in those days...brave, hardworking, and tough as shoe leather. What the heck happened?

    • @tomservo5347
      @tomservo5347 2 года назад +1

      @@harrykadaras9459 Feminism and not hurting 'feewings'.

  • @johndirado7210
    @johndirado7210 2 года назад +15

    Great movie even greater musical score I like they way they incorporated the sea shanties

  • @oldgoat142
    @oldgoat142 2 года назад +15

    Queequeg has always been one of my favorite characters in all of cinema.

  • @prodprod
    @prodprod 3 года назад +52

    "He'll rise and beckon...: Wonderful line -- and not Melville's -- it comes from the pen of Ray Bradbury who wrote the screenplay -- and yet it feels so integral to Melville you somehow feel that it must come from the book!

    • @ilokivi
      @ilokivi 2 года назад +2

      The author of The Illustrated Man wrote excellent dialogue; thinking himself into the shoes and minds of the crew of the Pequod was a rare talent.

    • @kennethrouse7942
      @kennethrouse7942 2 года назад +1

      And Elijah was played by the great character actor Royal Dano!

    • @deepcosmiclove
      @deepcosmiclove 2 года назад

      @@kennethrouse7942 Should have gotten an award for sure. Great acting. "Mornin' shipmates, mornin'. May the heavens bless ye."

    • @jacobmetz3267
      @jacobmetz3267 2 года назад +1

      I've mentioned elsewhere in the comments that this is one case where the movie is better than the book. The book seemed to be more of a guide to whale hunting. This movie was WAY more entertaining. The characters are incredible. Especially Gregory Peck as Ahab. The movie holds your attention. The book had me nodding off several times.

    • @jamisonescott2300
      @jamisonescott2300 Год назад +1

      The book was packed full of useless filler. An editor worth his salt would have slashed it to pieces, probably cut out two-thirds of it. The movie, however, was a masterpiece.

  • @germpore
    @germpore 2 года назад +4

    Such a gorgeous, classic film! And Youghal still looks a lot like that. One of the most underrated towns in Ireland, actually. An interesting bit of trivia - just a few km up the road from here, at Templemichael, is the spot where Stanley Kubrick filmed the first dueling scene in 'Barry Lyndon'.

  • @keithhargrave8661
    @keithhargrave8661 2 года назад +6

    A great extract. Just loved the shanty singing as the Pequod gets underway Funilly enough the British folksinger and folklorist A L Lloyd who played the shantyman ( black eye patch) went himself on a whaling voyage to the South Atlantic as a young man andin 1967 released an LP called Baleina ballads and songs of the whaling trade which Ihad for years. Also, with fellow singer Ewan McColl an LP Whaler out of New Bedford. These maybe available on CD now but I am not sure.

  • @3dbadboy1
    @3dbadboy1 3 года назад +20

    Probably the most terrifying prophecy in cinema I've ever seen.

  • @pilates68
    @pilates68 4 года назад +80

    John Houston really made a remarkably accurate period piece at a time when Hollywood turned out overly romanticized history. “The Alamo” starring John Wayne was awful. “Shenandoah “ starring Jimmy Stewart cast actors who made no effort to look like they were of the actual civil war period. John Houston’s “Moby Dick” was a film making anomaly. An earnest attempt to capture the roughness and hardship of life on 19th century whaling ship. The entire cast looks like Victorian photograph come to life.

    • @johncotton5561
      @johncotton5561 3 года назад +8

      So true. Good post and well explained

    • @michaelc.6532
      @michaelc.6532 3 года назад +4

      I agree with your post, but add the angle that both “The Alamo” and “Shenandoah” were enjoyable movies, but “The Alamo” was horribly inaccurate and Wayne interjected his own Cold War political views into it. “Shenandoah” was a good movie, but yes made no effort to look as if the characters were of that era. There are many movies where the hairstyles, mannerisms and dialect are straight from the time period they are made in and not from the time period portrayed. This movie by Huston was a masterpiece!

    • @emanuelmota7217
      @emanuelmota7217 2 года назад +2

      Excellent point. "Moby Dick" almost has a documentary feel, it's so realistic. Amazing movie.

    • @AirForceChmtrails
      @AirForceChmtrails 2 года назад +1

      I agree.

    • @SBCBears
      @SBCBears 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelc.6532 Which Cold Wars political views did he interject?

  • @andreas7136
    @andreas7136 2 года назад +10

    Very moving: the farewell scene. The women of the whalers facing a separation from their sons or husbands for 3 years (or forever).

    • @andreas7136
      @andreas7136 2 года назад

      8:52 Funny: the first mate Starbuck got to be the namesake of the well known worldwide coffee chain.

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 10 месяцев назад

      Andreas, are you sure it's not the one from Battlestar Galactica? Just wondering offhand.

  • @DragonDriver100
    @DragonDriver100 3 года назад +19

    Bradbury improved the story, making it all the more creepy and fantastic.

    • @jamisonescott2300
      @jamisonescott2300 Год назад

      Agreed. Melville's book is awful. The movie, however, is a masterpiece.

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 2 года назад +5

    I remember my 'Nanny', my Grandmother, taking me to see this film, in Providence, RI, when I was a small boy, I'm 72 now and still enjoy the film. Thank you 'Nanny' for being so good to me, love you always...I have always felt that those folks, in the harbor scene, were local to the area...Did Royal Dano ever deliver a better performance?...

    • @reggie2459
      @reggie2459 2 года назад +3

      They were locals. My grandfather and a friend were sitting near the quays during filming. John Houston came over talked to them and gave them 10 pounds each which was a fortune at the time. My grandfather and his friend were fishernen and he was very interested by them.

    • @pegg38
      @pegg38 2 года назад +3

      Jeff, thanks for a lovely childhood story and it takes place in Providence, RI. Must have been even more meaningful to see this movie in such a seafaring town. Gloucester, Mass is another I’m sure. The book “Perfect Storm” was a book to read. An easy read, and in a heavy storm, intense, to say the least. Enjoy Providence, Jeff, and many more fond memories too.

    • @jeffsmith2022
      @jeffsmith2022 2 года назад

      @@pegg38Oh yes, I have read it...Funny how 'snapshots' from our past reveal themselves from time to time...

    • @jeffsmith2022
      @jeffsmith2022 2 года назад +1

      @@reggie2459 Thank you for your story sir...

    • @reggie2459
      @reggie2459 2 года назад

      @@jeffsmith2022 your welcome..lovely stories..to be able to tell.

  • @fongofoll
    @fongofoll 14 лет назад +13

    Mike hackett would put names on most of the locals,as he has a lot of them in his books.It might also be of interest to note that there was only around 11 minutes of the film made in Youghal,the majority was filmed in Pinewood Studios England and 21 other countries around the world.And yes it was filmed in 1954,and released in 1956.Dvds of the complete film are available on line

  • @Wotsitorlabart
    @Wotsitorlabart 2 года назад +3

    A.L. (Bert) Lloyd English folk singer and folklorist as the lead shantyman @ 7.00.
    Apparently the line 'Go down you blood red roses' was written by Lloyd.

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir 2 года назад +5

    Elijah was portrayed by actor Royal Dano. I read Lord of the Rings while in Vietnam and I always pictured him in the part of Aragorn.

    • @johnhuttner9991
      @johnhuttner9991 2 года назад

      he was in the movie slaughter house 5

    • @SBCBears
      @SBCBears 2 года назад

      Good actor

    • @briscoedarling3237
      @briscoedarling3237 Год назад

      He was “Ten Spot” in ‘The Outlaw Josey Wales’. the man could play anything….

  • @mac2phin
    @mac2phin 2 года назад +8

    "A mild, mild day, Starbuck..." Poetry!

  • @anthonycantu8879
    @anthonycantu8879 2 года назад +8

    The camerawork is fantastic!
    How cool is it to draw a whale 🐋 as your name.
    Elijah. In the Book of Kings, Elijah was a prophet. How apt that he should foretell their fate!
    Beautiful movie.

  • @navycorpsman744
    @navycorpsman744 2 года назад +2

    Royal Dano was such a talented actor he could play any character or part.

  • @nelsonx5326
    @nelsonx5326 4 года назад +11

    Natural born spearchucker. Amazing scene. Amazing movie.

  • @Srulio
    @Srulio 2 года назад +4

    The movie stands the test of time as befits a classic.

  • @206or16
    @206or16 День назад

    The nautical songs the crew sings are just awesome. You can hear Edric Connor’s strong voice (Connor plays the harpooned Dagoo) quite clearly.

  • @NewBecker
    @NewBecker 13 лет назад +15

    My grandmother was in this :)

    • @jwoldin
      @jwoldin 4 года назад +1

      Becker, what part did she play? Very interesting.

    • @ChupeTTe
      @ChupeTTe 3 года назад

      Sweet

    • @blackpowerdiva4958
      @blackpowerdiva4958 Год назад

      One of those ugly a ss Seahags, no doubt 😂😂😂
      “What part did she play?” Duh
      Do you see chicks in any other part of the movie? Lol good grief.
      Other than at the church scene.

  • @lawrencemarocco8197
    @lawrencemarocco8197 2 года назад +4

    I especially liked the three harpooneers -- Quequeeg, Tashtego and Nagoo.

  • @rofflemows2
    @rofflemows2 13 лет назад +9

    1:18 "...on second thought, i don't want to go whaling anymore" =D

  • @brooklynbummer
    @brooklynbummer 2 года назад +2

    I enjoyed watching this movie, they had the right actors.

  • @keithhargrave8661
    @keithhargrave8661 2 года назад

    Correction to earlier commenr. The 1967 LP by AL Lloyd was called Leviathan and not Baleina. Reissued on CD by Topic Records Featured Alf Edwards who was in the film as the concertina player in the pub scene

  • @jeffreylocke8808
    @jeffreylocke8808 2 года назад +5

    The women felt the premonition of dread with Captain Ahab at the helm. That is why they look so worn down and full of remorse.

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 2 года назад

      Remorse? Wrong word I think.
      Their menfolk are about to set off on a long dangerous voyage from which they might never return. Hardly an occasion for merriment.

    • @MegaWolfgang
      @MegaWolfgang Месяц назад

      I think the women in those times on the day of sailing, always had a sense of dread. 50 per cent chance of seeing your husband, father or son again in 3 years, or never again! Quite often without any news of what happened to them.

  • @lindsaypeterholden2701
    @lindsaypeterholden2701 4 года назад +10

    Brilliant .Quite the best Moby Dick Film.Acting and script.The Pulpit scene with Orson Welles is inspiring and Gregory Peck is awesome when delivering some of Herman Melvilles text.Ok, the modern retakes are technicaly better,but the acting is not on the same level,(apart from Patrick Steward who plays Ahab well)

  • @mikekemp9877
    @mikekemp9877 2 года назад +6

    though shot in youghal which suited huston as he lived in ireland at the time he had intended to shoot in nantucket where the ship the story is based on came from is mentioned heavily in the book and has several whaling museums.however the locals demanded astronomical fees for filming accomadation and use of locations support boats and the various permits they would need.they were trying to exploit the movie makers.they relocated to ireland removed nantucket from the script substituting new bedford.not gonna get rich out of tourists on my movie the sobs huston said! on the last shot of the film peck was tied to the plastic whale towed by an unseen boat.huston had started his end of shoot celebration early with his irish pals a lot of whom were seen in the film.as peck went under the water the tow line broke and the whale drifted out to sea! greg went under several more times but to his credit kept acting.keep shooting was hustons reaction.he got great realistic shots as can be seen but they barely got greg off before he drowned.thank god they did said peck if huston had a couple more drinks me and moby would still be floating round the atlantic.the whale was never recovered .peck said i suppose its still out there scaring mariners who will swear moby dick was real!

    • @edwardhogan1877
      @edwardhogan1877 2 года назад

      One man' 'exploit' is another man's 'business acumen'!

    • @mikekemp9877
      @mikekemp9877 2 года назад

      @@edwardhogan1877 in this case the acumen didnt work as huston filmed itin ireland and never mentioned nantucket in the script.

  • @bikefixer
    @bikefixer 15 лет назад +11

    The sea shantie, "A-Roving."

    • @udoquass8363
      @udoquass8363 2 года назад

      I suppose it's "Blood Red Roses".

    • @udoquass8363
      @udoquass8363 2 года назад +2

      ...and "Heave Away, My Johnny"

  • @LTURNERSR
    @LTURNERSR 14 лет назад +5

    i homeschool n my kids love this movie!!!

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 3 года назад +4

    Great Elijah scene

  • @michaelellard4664
    @michaelellard4664 2 года назад

    I remember it well and visiting the set.

  • @scott-ish404
    @scott-ish404 4 года назад +3

    Maybe someone said it already, but the film was released in 1956, not 54.

  • @Dabhach1
    @Dabhach1 2 года назад +1

    For those who don't know, Youghal, in southern Ireland, where this scene was filmed, is pronounced "Y'awl", like in the American south.

    • @johncahalane7327
      @johncahalane7327 2 года назад +1

      Yes I come from Co Cork been to Youghal and its famous Clock Tower it was filmed there in 1954 and I went the other way too I stood many years ago in the pulpit of The Seaman's Bethel in New Bedford where Hermen Melville preached in 1840 New Bedford is a must if your going to Cape Cod history of the sea in in the blood.. History of sea monsters too but if you want to see them the Cork coast too lots of sperms, fin and minke whales even a few Killer Whales, dolphins basking sharks we even had Wally the Warlus last year...

  • @CONWAYCPA1
    @CONWAYCPA1 12 лет назад +3

    My father, Patrick Conway, was recruited to build small huts that he thinks were used for some reason by the film company. He remembers a dance, after the movie, where he says some or so Hollywood actors attended. he mentioned Lana Turner?

  • @maryneville2495
    @maryneville2495 Год назад +2

    Years ago in the 1970s when I was visiting relatives in Ardmore, a man in a bar told us how the the big fake white whale made for the 1956 movie would "escape" and the local fisherman of Youghal would have to go get him. Too funny! Am reading MD at present - it is fascinating for sure.

  • @oldtimedrumcorps
    @oldtimedrumcorps 5 лет назад +3

    "All tricked out ' They knew the language

  • @supplevideo
    @supplevideo 16 лет назад +2

    Wow mick thats great quality footage, im envious i cant seem to get my stuff playing smoothly at all.
    My grandads pigs were in that film! fame and fortune haha

  • @24602400
    @24602400 2 года назад +2

    When movies were worth watching.

  • @bebopkirby
    @bebopkirby Год назад +1

    Seems a little odd that the rookie is explaining the whaling ship to the seasoned harpooner.

  • @nigel900
    @nigel900 2 года назад +6

    Awesome movie. Couldn’t make a movie as character driven, with all of Hollywood’s “finest”, if you poured a billion dollars over it…

  • @bagoistvan3182
    @bagoistvan3182 2 года назад +1

    🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸The old stars and stripes never had fly so proud than in this movie on the Pequod mast. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @jacobmetz3267
    @jacobmetz3267 2 года назад +2

    I recently finished the book on which this movie was based. Gotta say, it might be blasphemy, but this is one case where the movie was WAY better than the book. The scene with Elijah the Prophet was a fine example.

    • @jamisonescott2300
      @jamisonescott2300 Год назад +1

      Yes, the book was a real yawner. Stuffed to the gills with worthless information. The movie, however, is a masterpiece.

  • @perfesser944
    @perfesser944 4 месяца назад +1

    Excellent apprenticeship to become the Admiral of the Seaview.

  • @bystander1489
    @bystander1489 2 года назад +3

    My mother was an extra in this film

  • @ianjackson8643
    @ianjackson8643 2 года назад

    the ship is the 3 masted schooner Rylands built by Nicholson & Marsh at Glasson Dock near Lancaster, England

    • @brianperry
      @brianperry 2 года назад

      The ship is a Barque… a schooner is fore and aft rigged

    • @ianjackson8643
      @ianjackson8643 2 года назад

      @@brianperry nope it was built as a 3 masted schooner it seems it was converted for its screen roles it also played as the Hispaniola the National Maritime Museum has the half block of the ship as built but when RKO pictures purchased it they converted it to its square rigged appearance

  • @anibalcesarnishizk2205
    @anibalcesarnishizk2205 2 года назад

    Leo Genn as Starbucks and as Petronius as well.He was always with mad people as a guide.He did his best to keep them in touch with reality.

  • @terencej72
    @terencej72 Год назад +1

    "lay not up for yourself, treasures upon earth where moth and rust do corrupt". I believe from the gospel of Matthew. Got to Love Bildad "Hast never been a pirate has thee?. hast not murdered though last captain at sea? He'll do" - if only most interviews were that easy...

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 10 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂Christ in a Cartoon.....

  • @johnchambers2996
    @johnchambers2996 2 года назад +1

    The funny part is that the initial bid of a 177th part of the profit is about twice the 300th part that Ismael is supposed to thank the first fellow for - just got ripped-off.

    • @sorenlilienthal1368
      @sorenlilienthal1368 2 года назад +1

      Initially, it was the 777th part of the profit. And the heathen Queequegg got 5 times the amount of the good, strapping christian Ishmael.

    • @johnchambers2996
      @johnchambers2996 2 года назад +1

      @@sorenlilienthal1368 Oh, I must have heard wrong. Nevertheless, that was a common trick pulled on the first time shippers.... along with charging them for food and most everything else. By the way, Melville and Hawthorne were good friends and they were definitely no adherers to the Christian religion,.

    • @edwardhogan1877
      @edwardhogan1877 2 года назад +1

      @@johnchambers2996 What one of the owners' said about taking the bread out the mouths of shareholders ( many not particularly well off) is still very true in the contemporary world but , of course, 'political incorrect' as it has become so fashionable to demonise corporations.

    • @johnchambers2996
      @johnchambers2996 2 года назад

      @@edwardhogan1877 Got to love the common platitude about corporations not being people. I guess the same holds for governments and taxpayers too.

  • @nampam3945
    @nampam3945 4 года назад +4

    Peck doesn't blink at all; how did he do it?

    • @hellbooks3024
      @hellbooks3024 2 года назад

      He learned that from Sandy Meisner.

    • @emanuelmota7217
      @emanuelmota7217 2 года назад

      Captn Ahab ain't got no soul, THAT'S how.

  • @LesterMoore
    @LesterMoore 2 года назад +1

    I read that the character Starbuck is the basis for the name of the famed American coffee company. Don't know for sure if this is true.

    • @alexs365
      @alexs365 7 месяцев назад +2

      Absolutely true. The company itself explains it on its website. Looking for a name, they resorted to Melville’s Moby Dick proposing initially “Pequod”, suggesting a sense of adventure, a connection to the Northwest and a link to the seafaring tradition of the early coffee traders, but rejected it. Then came “Starbo”, and finally “Starbuck”, by the Ahab’s first mate. And in an old marine book found a mysterious nautical figure of a smiling siren, a twin-tailed mermaid. With a name and a logo, a brand was born in 1971.

  • @davidm1149
    @davidm1149 2 года назад +1

    Was Ray Bradbury the writer for the screenplay? Queequeq (symbol for all mankind bound to ignorant servitude in the flesh) was played by Friedrich Ledebur. I only saw this when I was @10 yrs old, didn't realize Gregory Peck was in it. The Pequod was portrayed by the "Moby Dick", built in England in 1887 and appropriated by the film industry in 1950. It was later used in "Treasure Island". Behind the scenes: ruclips.net/video/P0gGEaWpf-g/видео.html

  • @JoshBG20
    @JoshBG20 4 года назад +4

    I thought Queequeg earned 90th percent of the cut. In this one they gave him 60th percent

    • @nampam3945
      @nampam3945 4 года назад +4

      a sixtieth part; after all expenses are taken out and the owners paid off, the mysterious native of kokovoko gets 1/60 of the profit. Ishmael gets 5 times less at 1/300, but Bildad thought him worth 1/777, which he was happy to accept, because he was perhaps a fugitive. Awesome movie

    • @brianwolle2509
      @brianwolle2509 4 года назад

      no evidence of ishmail being a fugitive!

    • @nampam3945
      @nampam3945 4 года назад

      @@brianwolle2509 Ishmael is an exile, a wanderer, perhaps a fugitive from something. Ishmael in the Bible was an exile after being driven from home. Ishmael was running but we don't know what from or just wandering seeking himself. BTW, listen to Bob Dylan's Nobel prize speech. I never knew Dylan was influenced by Melville.

  • @russellking9762
    @russellking9762 2 года назад

    Great movie…Gregory Peck was awesome in this!

  • @denniscoffey1247
    @denniscoffey1247 Год назад

    Royal Dano was such a talented actor

  • @morriganravenchild6613
    @morriganravenchild6613 4 года назад +1

    Mrs M Stack who lived in South Cross Rd at 6:36 forefront.

    • @oldtimedrumcorps
      @oldtimedrumcorps 4 года назад +1

      Really cool info .Did you know her ? A beautiful Grandma . Perfectly cast . I would venture ,Rest her Soul ?

    • @morriganravenchild6613
      @morriganravenchild6613 4 года назад +2

      @@oldtimedrumcorps Yes, I met her several times. We were fortunate enough to travel to Youghal every summer and stay with her.
      A really lovely lady. She passed on when I was in my early teens. Wonderful memories.

    • @BTX61
      @BTX61 2 года назад

      Oh her! She had such a beautiful "Gran" face!

  • @kateburbidge4302
    @kateburbidge4302 6 лет назад +2

    Hannah flavin .....my mum could name them all. Her name was Kathleen Corbett

  • @oldtimedrumcorps
    @oldtimedrumcorps 7 лет назад +4

    Great sea Score

    • @uslines
      @uslines 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely! Best sea score of all time. Does for Moby Dick what Steiner's score did for King Kong.

  • @david9783
    @david9783 2 года назад

    Boy, those townsfolk sure looked happy!

  • @monkeyboy4746
    @monkeyboy4746 4 года назад +1

    I see the fellow taking shelter in a teepee sort of structure and always thought it was unusual for the time period. Did people on ships ever use this sort of thing, or does it have some symbolic meaning in the story? I know it is a very practical shelter, just not on a ship. It looks like Melville wrote a novel called Typee, but that was not related to the shelter.

    • @brianwolle2509
      @brianwolle2509 4 года назад +2

      in the book, it was the first captain who was in the teepee, not the second. he was down below.

    • @Therabbitmaze-v2j
      @Therabbitmaze-v2j 5 месяцев назад +1

      Whale ships often had a large oven on the deck to melt down the whale oil and you could see them from the smoke from miles away.

  • @uslines
    @uslines 2 года назад

    Royal Dano shipmates. Five great minutes.

  • @johnhenryholiday4964
    @johnhenryholiday4964 2 года назад

    Lloyd Bridges is the guy showing the ship...

  • @voltanhawk1505
    @voltanhawk1505 2 года назад

    What song they sing?

  • @connorcmedia
    @connorcmedia 3 года назад +2

    This dude straight up signed a whale…

  • @jaroslavdrahokoupil9839
    @jaroslavdrahokoupil9839 Год назад

    Just great...Thank you very much.I can smell the salt air and fear of whales...Up helm, friends!

  • @JohnSmith-oo4qx
    @JohnSmith-oo4qx 3 года назад +2

    Goddamn tiny hats have controlled everything

  • @Therabbitmaze-v2j
    @Therabbitmaze-v2j 5 месяцев назад

    Wow, crazy job interview "Have you ever murdered your captain?"

  • @morrisminor56
    @morrisminor56 2 года назад +1

    When men were made of steel and ships were made of wood.

    • @sophistichistory4645
      @sophistichistory4645 2 года назад +1

      Still, women were, and still are, more appreciative of wood.

    • @Therabbitmaze-v2j
      @Therabbitmaze-v2j 5 месяцев назад +1

      Nothing like the feeling of climbing up the mast 100 feet over a rolling deck without a safety line' and only a rope to stand on while you wrestled a heavy sail.

  • @101325
    @101325 2 года назад

    I thought these scenes were Fishguard in Wales?

    • @mickoconnell68
      @mickoconnell68 2 года назад

      All the harbour scenes were filmed in Youghal Co.Cork, Ireland in 1954..The film was released in 1956

  • @Kelly14UK
    @Kelly14UK 2 года назад +1

    Christ. Check the length of that guy's hair for a '50s film. 04:21 >

  • @imfinitypubgmobile6368
    @imfinitypubgmobile6368 Год назад

    This Movie's Year Is 1956.

  • @maineoutdoorsman677
    @maineoutdoorsman677 2 года назад

    Round the world round the world

  • @hemming57
    @hemming57 Месяц назад

    Do you want the fictional names or the actors?

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir 2 месяца назад

    Later remakes of this movie were garbage.

  • @alexciocca4451
    @alexciocca4451 2 года назад

    Is that Sterling Hayden ?

    • @sorenlilienthal1368
      @sorenlilienthal1368 2 года назад +1

      Ishmael was played by Richard Basehart, Queequegg by Friedrich von Ledebur

    • @uslines
      @uslines 2 года назад

      Basehart fantastic in all his roles.

  • @oldtimedrumcorps
    @oldtimedrumcorps 2 года назад

    You want Tall Ships reality? Put away that hand held piece of commercialism and " Read Two Years before the Mast " by Richard Dana . Then after, fetch the tech back up and peck away . " Mornin', may the heavens bless you ."

  • @sophistichistory4645
    @sophistichistory4645 2 года назад

    The Essex had a rougher time of it.

  • @robertstewart757
    @robertstewart757 2 года назад

    The movie came out in 1956, not 1954.

    • @robertstewart757
      @robertstewart757 2 года назад

      OK, so I see that the scenes were shot in 1954.

    • @mickoconnell68
      @mickoconnell68 2 года назад

      The scenes here were shot in 1954 the film was then released in 1956

  • @andrelacombe2822
    @andrelacombe2822 2 года назад

    john houston explains why this looks so good and the era explains why it sounds so bad

  • @conquerer329
    @conquerer329 14 лет назад +1

    6:12 the women withe gray hair is my great grand mothers cousin i knew she was in moby dick i just didnt really watch the movie

  • @spankyharland9845
    @spankyharland9845 2 года назад

    I always thought this was a Disney movie....until they kill a whale.

  • @singalongwrudy8690
    @singalongwrudy8690 2 года назад

    When brims were flat

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 года назад

    substantive choice for God's federal hegemony of free will kingdom.

  • @killerjoe5628
    @killerjoe5628 2 года назад

    Dickie Moe....

  • @anthonyfarkas9286
    @anthonyfarkas9286 Год назад

    When man and woman truly loved one another ... Shipping off for year at a time and she will still be there for you when you got home... This generation is so weak and lame 🫤

  • @ianhillman4007
    @ianhillman4007 2 года назад +4

    With women that looked like that ashore... no wonder so many men were happy to ship out for years at a time. 😱😱😱

    • @reggie2459
      @reggie2459 2 года назад

      Not a very nice comment.

    • @mitchelputman538
      @mitchelputman538 2 года назад +1

      Hilarious comment

    • @bobbylee2853
      @bobbylee2853 2 года назад +1

      Tahiti or bust!

    • @Super241946
      @Super241946 2 года назад

      @@mitchelputman538 Michael didn't have a mother!

    • @jackiereynolds2888
      @jackiereynolds2888 2 года назад

      Well, they do say that, -
      "Beauty is in the eye of the ... " Whatever.
      Todays women would be completely useless at that time and place. Men wanted and needed women who were strong, good Christians, good mothers and companions, and were also good workers and possessed a great deal of intestinal fortitude. 'Good looks' were completely useless;
      No man would want that.

  • @dltanner99
    @dltanner99 13 лет назад +3

    Cryptozoology novel about two boys who find something strange on the beach one night see video book trailer

  • @steveg8322
    @steveg8322 23 дня назад

    …better a sober heathen than a drunken Christian..- H.M.

  • @davidrobinson8337
    @davidrobinson8337 3 года назад

    Give us a good chsnty!!

  • @gookumpucky4842
    @gookumpucky4842 2 года назад

    Who played queequeg?

  • @bertiewooster3326
    @bertiewooster3326 2 года назад +1

    There all dead now.

  • @joelstein4657
    @joelstein4657 2 года назад

    Oh, I think we should remake this to be relevant. We could use a bunch of college kids for actors and let the director write the script. Then we'll have a hollywood blockbuster.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 2 года назад

    sovereign God substantive choice organizing people of world