Champagne Murphy
Well-Known Member
Knowing more than I want to about mental illness and depression, I don't want to watch a film about someone having a mental breakdown.
+1.
Knowing more than I want to about mental illness and depression, I don't want to watch a film about someone having a mental breakdown.
In fact I think the makers did quite a poor job of building up any kind of picture of the isolation involved. He seems to be on the radio to his family every 5 minutes. The film is relatively short by today's standards (100 mins) which should have left scope for building up the impression of solitude. But that would have been a different film entirely, not one for mainstream cinema goers and certainly not for those who have already commented that it's too slow.
Much as I hate to add comment on a second thread when another is already running...
The mental breakdown is, imho, rather downplayed. Sensitivity for the family? Because more would have involved too much speculation about the inside of someone's head? Because it would have been harder to write? Because it's intended as a sentimental biopic for mainstream audiences rather than anything more "difficult"? I hope it's not too much of a spoiler to say that the film does not heavily focus on the progression into the state in which Crowhurst was making his later journal entries. His mental state is presented as a fairly rational despair at his impossible situation with a couple of hallucinations chucked in and it's not as hard to watch as those who have read "The Strange Last Voyage" can imagine it might have been.
In fact I think the makers did quite a poor job of building up any kind of picture of the isolation involved. He seems to be on the radio to his family every 5 minutes. The film is relatively short by today's standards (100 mins) which should have left scope for building up the impression of solitude. But that would have been a different film entirely, not one for mainstream cinema goers and certainly not for those who have already commented that it's too slow.
When I said its too slow I think its because I knew what was going to happen and the film doesn't really build up the horrible tension that it could have.
Well down here in South Devon there was a story going round that boat owners were paid to take their boats away from the river
Teign harbour for the duration of the film making, cannot confirm it as not got a boat in the Estuary where the filming took place.