The Bounty

    The Bounty
    1984

    Synopsis

    The familiar story of Lieutenant Bligh, whose cruelty leads to a mutiny on his ship. This version follows both the efforts of Fletcher Christian to get his men beyond the reach of British retribution, and the epic voyage of Lieutenant Bligh to get his loyalists safely to East Timor in a tiny lifeboat.

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    Cast

    • Mel GibsonFletcher Christian
    • Anthony HopkinsLieutenant William Bligh
    • Laurence OlivierAdmiral Hood
    • Edward FoxCaptain Greetham
    • Daniel Day-LewisJohn Fryer
    • Bernard HillWilliam Cole
    • Phil DavisEdward Young
    • Liam NeesonCharles Churchill
    • Wi Kuki KaaKing Tynah
    • Tevaite VernetteMauatua

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The Bounty is a great adventure, a lush romance, and a good movie.
    • 88

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      The picture is slightly too long, there are some special effects (especially during a storm at sea) that don't come off, and Vangelis's electronic moans on the soundtrack are sporadically anachronistic, but The Bounty is otherwise a spectacularly sustained piece of epic filmmaking. [04 May 1984]
    • 80

      Variety

      The Bounty is an intelligent, firstrate, revisionist telling of the famous tale of Fletcher Christian's mutiny against Captain Bligh. Particularly distinguished by a sensational, and startlingly human, performance by Anthony Hopkins as Bligh, heretofore one of history's most one-dimensional villains.
    • 63

      Miami Herald

      Occasionally, this Bounty seems about to soar; the scene in which the ship first makes land at Tahiti, all throbbing drums, bare breasts and hooting sailors, is wonderfully rich if no less cliched. At other times, as when the Bounty leaves calm water for a gale in a split-second cut, the film seems almost amateurish. The rest of it occupies the middle ground between ho-hum and grand -- sure to disappoint those knowledgeable about the early films, still likely to engage those with two hours to kill. [05 May 1984, p.C5]
    • 60

      The Guardian

      The Bounty has an incredible cast and a fabulously well-put-together production, and pays impressive attention to historical accuracy – more than any of the previous cinematic recreations. With all this going for it, it's a pity that the drama falls flat.
    • 60

      Empire

      Film is elegant but never beautiful, a pretence at Lean’s magnificence contradicted by a lavish but anachronistic score by Vangelis. It is the words and performances which excite; their director is out of his depth.
    • 60

      Newsweek

      Though The Bounty is almost willfully perverse in thwarting audience expectations, and though it ends anticlimactically, you can't dismiss it. You know you've seen something. A spell, however faint, has been cast, like the one the island casts on the Bounty's crew. [14 May 1984, p.81]
    • 50

      Time Out

      It's all a brave try, though Gibson is perhaps not up to the demands of a Christian's progress from naive rating to self-loathing exile, and Donaldson's direction often verges on the stolid.

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