Master
and Commander
Crowe expands horizons in epic
Commander
By Trent Loomis
In Russell Crowes latest epic, Master and
Commander: The Far Side of the World, the Australian
born megastar adds humor to his macho on-screen persona
to give the film a human quality that hasnt been
explored in subsequent movies.
The film takes place in the wartime during Napoleons
reign and starts out with Captain Lucky
Jack Aubrey (Crowe) of the British Navy guiding his
vessel, the H.M.S. Surprise through calm waters before
it gets ambushed by a superior French ship.
The Surprise is badly damaged and suffers many casualties,
but is able to make the necessary repairs, which start
a game of cat-and-mouse with the mysterious French ship
to the other end of the world.
It is an exciting movie that not only satisfies the
adventurer in all of us, but also lets us in on a side
of Crowe never seen before. He cracks jokes and handles
delicate situations with compassion.
The title Master and Commander is a bit
ostentatious, but serves Lucky Jack well
as he is a god among men, and the sole inspiration to
fight.
Crowes vulnerable human side can be attributed
to director Peter Weir, (The Truman Show,
Dead Poet's Society) who transformed Jim
Carey and Robin Williams from typecast comedians into
indelible dramatic characters. Its a subtle move,
but it reaps rewards, especially from the crew of the
H.M.S. Surprise.
The movie is based on author Patrick OBriens
series of Aubrey/Maturin novels, which follows Aubrey
and the ships doctor, Stephen Maturin (Paul Bettany)
from the coast of Brazil, south to Cape Horn and all
the way to the Galapagos Islands, literally on the other
side of the world.
Master and Commander happens to be the first
movie filmed partially on the Galapagos Islands.
What Master and Commander has up its sleeve
that no other modern day film can boast is its genre.
The fact that there arent any movies that cover
this period and platform make it all the more intoxicating.
There are a few things that weve seen before but
its anchor is too small and light that it wont
sink this cinematic ship.
This
article is from the Daily Forty-Niner at California
State University Long Beach.
It was distributed by U-Wire.
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