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In December, 1787, the Bounty sails from Portsmouth, bound for Tahiti, amid great optimism among its crew, including idealistic midshipman Franchot Tone. But as the journey continues, shipboard life becomes a nightmare, a series of desperate confrontations between vicious, bullying Captain Bligh and the courageous first mate, Fletcher Christian. The crew mutiny, set the captain adrift, and eventually come to shore on the remote Pitcairn Islands. (official distributor synopsis)

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kaylin 

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English The film has a quite interesting pace and there are scenes that are almost unnecessary because they do not have much significance for the plot, but it doesn't matter that much, just like it doesn't matter that the film is minimally action-packed. It shows how people can stand up to a bastard if they have the strength, and it is amazingly evident how the system can suppress everything. Now it's up to you to decide what is better - to obey the rules at any cost and become a slave, or to stand up to the system and let it grind you down. The film expresses it exactly as needed. ()

DaViD´82 

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English In view of when this was made, the black-and-white viewpoint is no surprise and so you have to accept right at the start that Bligh is written like the embodiment of a sea-salt Antichrist. So what if the reality is completely different? Luckily Laughton doesn’t demonize Bligh, no grimaces, no rolling eyes, no fits of rage... he sticks purely to voice, diction and a penetrating stare. It’s a shame that he doesn’t have a decent opponent in Gable, so it proved impossible to create the right atmosphere of tension between these characters, paralyzing the entire crew. If they had managed to achieve an atmosphere at least half as good as in Hornblower: Mutiny, there wouldn’t be anything to complain about, because everything would have been as it should. The fate of the Bounty and its crew is a powerful story in itself even in this form, which has very little to do with reality. Many of the scenes were shot on real floating beauties, so there is much to admire and some images would be great framed, a prime example being the Bounty lost in the fog. ()

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