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With: William Boyd, Elinor Fair, Frank Coghlan Jr. (a.k.a. "Junior" Coghlan), John Miljan, Walter Long, Louis Payne, Burr McIntosh, George Ovey, Zack Williams, William Blaisdell, Clarence Burton, Stanton Heck, Julia Faye, Harry Holden, Nicholas Soussanin
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Written by: Denison Clift, Garrett Fort, John W. Krafft, Garnett Weston
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Directed by: Rupert Julian, etc.
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MPAA Rating: Not Rated
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Running Time: 130
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Date: 03/19/2013
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Under Full Sail: Silent Cinema on the High Seas (2009)
Nautical by Nature
By Jeffrey M. Anderson The great Flicker Alley continues its superb series of silent-era films on DVD with this fun five-film collection that every nautical buff should see. It starts off with a rousing feature film The Yankee Clipper (1927), directed by Rupert Julian (of Phantom of the Opera fame) and produced by Cecil B. DeMille. The plot is pretty creaky stuff, but the incredible high seas footage elevates the picture to an astonishing new level. (The film cost nearly half a million dollars to produce and flopped.) In the film, the new high speed American ship the Yankee Clipper enters into a race with an equally fast British ship, from China to Boston. The winner gets exclusive rights to China's tea trade, but the captains wager each other's ships as well. To make matters more difficult, the American Captain Hal Winslow (William Boyd, later known as "Hopalong Cassidy") has fallen in love with Lady Jocelyn Huntington (Elinor Fair), who is engaged to the cowardly cad Paul de Vigny (John Miljan). By a twist of fate, both Lady Jocelyn and Paul de Vigny wind up on the American ship, rather than the English ship where they're supposed to be. During the long race, the Americans endure storms, thirst and a near mutiny, and Paul de Vigny's true colors come out. Perhaps the oddest addition is that of child actor "Junior" Coghlan as a stowaway who mostly provides some ill-fitting comic relief, but also helps out in the end. There is one heart-stopping sequence atop the ship's rigging, and the great bunch of salty character actors add to the film's flavor. Flicker Alley's transfer is truly excellent, with the exception of a few brief moments that turn faded and muddy (although, by comparison, it's easier to tell just how great the restored stuff looks). Dennis James provides a new Wurlitzer pipe organ score, and Coghlan -- still alive today at 93 -- contributes a brief audio interview about his experiences at sea during the movie. DVD Details: The disc also includes four non-fiction short films, produced between 1922 and 1932, all with amazing sea footage. They are: Around the Horn in a Square Rigger (1933), The Square Rigger (1932), Ship Ahoy (1928) and Down to the Sea in Ships (1922). The latter documents an "authentic" whale hunt.
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