Asides

Something to watch tonight: Thursday 31 October

By October 31, 2024No Comments

The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (Friedkin, 2023)

Lance Reddick and Kiefer Sutherland in William Friedkin's 2023 film of the Caine Mutiny Court-Martial

When William Friedkin passed away in August last year, I imme­di­ately recom­men­ded his clas­sic The French Connection (still avail­able on Disney+ in New Zealand and Max in the USA) and kept an eagle-eye out for his final film, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial which was due to première at Venice in September.

Funerals & Snakes
Something to watch tonight: Tuesday 8 August
William Friedkin passed away yes­ter­day at the age of 87…
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Last Labour Weekend – thanks to one of my US-based stream­ing accounts – I was lucky enough to see it with sub­scriber JL of Freemans Bay and we were both so impressed that it was clear I would have to recom­mend it as soon as it became avail­able in New Zealand.

So I waited … and waited … and waited. For some reas­on it has taken a year to finally make it to stream­ing screens here.

Why is it such an easy recom­mend­a­tion? Well, it has great bones for a start. Herman Wouk won a Pulitzer Prize in 1952 for his ori­gin­al nov­el and then adap­ted it him­self for the stage a year later. A year after that, the first film ver­sion was released fea­tur­ing Humphrey Bogart, José Ferrer and Fred MacMurray.

Versions of it were made for tele­vi­sion in the US (1955) and Australia (1959) and in 1988 Robert Altman dir­ec­ted The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial as a TV movie fea­tur­ing Brad Davis, Eric Bogosian and Jeff Daniels.

The nov­el fol­lows a fairly straight­for­ward nar­rat­ive, fol­low­ing the Pacific tour of duty of a mine­sweep­er, the U.S.S. Caine, dur­ing World War II. The com­mand­er of the ship, Queeg, is not liked or much respec­ted by his crew. He is a stick­ler for the rules, to the exclu­sion of (they believe) decency or com­mon sense. They also believe that he is sus­pect under pres­sure and his second-in-command, Lieutenant Maryk, relieves him of his duties fol­low­ing a typhoon.

Queeg con­siders this to be mutiny and when the ship returns to port, Maryk is put on tri­al. The play, and the screen adapt­a­tions of it, are courtroom dra­mas and the events of the mutiny (and the aggres­sions and micro-aggressions that led to it) are relayed by wit­nesses not flash­backs. So, it’s talky but it is gripping. 

Friedkin adap­ted Wouk’s play him­self and brought the set­ting and con­text up to date. The struc­ture – the slow build to a dev­ast­at­ing cli­max and then an epi­logue that changes the audience’s per­cep­tions – that was all there wait­ing for an expert dir­ect­or like Friedkin to put his stamp on.

Friedkin was 87 when he made the film and for insur­ance reas­ons Guillermo Del Toro was on set the entire time in case he, you know, keeled over, but his health held out and Del Toro and has said that it was a mas­ter­class for him to watch the great man in action. The budget was low, the sched­ule was tight – more than one take for a shot meant added pres­sure on every­one – but Friedkin main­tained his grace throughout.

Not only was The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial his final film, it was also the final cred­it for the great Lance Reddick (The Wire) who plays the lead judge, Blakely. 


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Where to watch The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on Neon or digit­al rent­al from AroVision

Australia: Digital rental

Canada, Ireland, USA and UK: Streaming on Paramount+