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The Old Man and the Sea (1958)

The Old Man and the Sea (1958)
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Ernest Hemingway's short novel The Old Man and the Sea was probably unfilmable to begin with, but this didn't stop John Sturges from trying to cinematize Hemingway's tight little character study. Spencer Tracy is the Old Man, a Cuban fisherman who tries to haul in a huge fish that he catches far from shore. Tracy's tiny boat is besieged by sharks and by natural elements, but the Old Man stubbornly sticks to his job. In the end, the fish is nothing more than a skeleton, and the Old Man returns to his tiny hovel to "dream about the lions." Spencer Tracy may have been dreaming about the Oscar when he agreed to make this film, but Old Man and the Sea is defeated by pretentiousness and by several unconvincing "sea" scenes shot in a studio tank (even though both Tracy and director Sturges underwent incredible hardships filming in a real boat on the real ocean). Old Man and the Sea was remade as a 1990 made-for-TV movie starring Anthony Quinn, which compounded the mistakes made in the Tracy version by grafting on a pointless love story. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Spencer TracyFelipe Pazos, (more)
Director(s):
John Sturges
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Old Man and the Sea

Ernest Hemingway's short novel The Old Man and the Sea was probably unfilmable to begin with, but this didn't stop John Sturges from trying to cinematize Hemingway's tight little character study. Spencer Tracy is the Old Man, a Cuban fisherman who tries to haul in a huge fish that he catches far from shore. Tracy's tiny boat is besieged by sharks and by natural elements, but the Old Man stubbornly sticks to his job. In the end, the fish is nothing more than a skeleton, and the Old Man returns to his tiny hovel to "dream about the lions." Spencer Tracy may have been dreaming about the Oscar when he agreed to make this film, but Old Man and the Sea is defeated by pretentiousness and by several unconvincing "sea" scenes shot in a studio tank (even though both Tracy and director Sturges underwent incredible hardships filming in a real boat on the real ocean). Old Man and the Sea was remade as a 1990 made-for-TV movie starring Anthony Quinn, which compounded the mistakes made in the Tracy version by grafting on a pointless love story. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
86 mins

Complete Cast of The Old Man and the Sea


Director(s):
John Sturges
Writer(s):
Peter Viertel
Producer(s):
Leland Hayward, Sr.
The Old Man and the Sea Awards:
  • 1958 - National Board of Review - Best Picture
  • 1958 - National Board of Review - Best Actor
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Member Reviews
 
Dan R.

A problematic movie, nearly ruined by some of the worst sound-stage fake rear projection nonsense -- the ocean does not like such faking. Tracy is incredible, so good it hurts. If you can tune into its pacing, it is a fine movie, which feels much longer than its running time. See it in wide-screen only -- the REAL ocean photography is stunning.

Yes   |   No

 
Ron C.

This film is more like poetry than prose....a metaphorical glimpse of a life well lived. Too bad Hemingway didn't take a dose of his wisdom as portrayed here before he ended his own life.

Yes   |   No

 
Raymond M.

Outstanding adventure story that tells of man's will-to-succeed in spite of the unyielding and unforgiving forces of nature. The story is seen through the eyes by of the central character by way of superb narration that only master like Hemingway could describe. Spencer Tracy is wonderful as the film's only central character. If you like story's by master novelist's like Hemingway, you'll like this. It it were ever remade with today's technology, it would be on the same level as Castaway with Tom Hanks. However, this was made in the 50s. Obviously a big difference. If you can overlook that, it's a wonderful story.

Yes   |   No

 
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