Based
on a horrific real-life incident and featuring an enormous cast of
international stars, Voyage of the Damned
should be powerful, but because the filmmakers opted for a talky approach—and because
so many actors were relegated to minor roles that no single character provides
narrative focus—Voyage of the Damned
is merely pedestrian. The opportunity to make something great was so broadly
missed, in fact, that it’s possible some enterprising soul in the future will
revisit the subject matter and generate a remake with the impact this original
version should have had.
Set in 1939, the picture depicts one of the Third
Reich’s most brazen propaganda schemes. The Nazis loaded hundreds of Jews, some
of whom were extracted from concentration camps, onto a luxury liner headed
from Europe to Cuba. The passengers were told they were being set free, but the
Nazis’ plan was to publicize the inevitable refusal by the Cuban government to
accept so many unwanted immigrants. Per the insidious designs of Third Reich
official Joseph Goebbels, the plan was to “prove” that Jews are unwanted
everywhere, thus justifying the Final Solution. And therein lies the
fundamental narrative problem of this picture—every person on board the ship,
save for the captain and a few Nazi functionaries—is essentially a pawn in a
larger game that’s taking place in Berlin. Thus, none of the characters in the
movie truly drives the action, although some brave souls among the passengers
prepare political counter-attacks once the true nature of the journey becomes
evident.
Intelligently but unremarkably written by David Butler and Steve
Shagan, from a book by Max Morgan-Witts and Gordon Thomas, Voyage of the Damned was directed by versatile journeyman Stuart Rosenberg,
who generally thrived with pulpier material; his long dialogue scenes end up
feeling stilted and theatrical, especially because some actors ham it up to
make the most of their abbreviated screen time. Surprisingly, performers Lee
Grant, Katharine Ross, and Oskar Werner each received Golden Globe nominations
(Grant got an Oscar nod, too), even though their roles in Voyage of the Damned are so ordinary—and the overall story so
turgid—that nothing really lingers in the memory except the haunting real-life
circumstance underlying the story. (The picture’s shortcomings are exacerbated
by an anticlimactic ending, which apparently represents a somewhat rose-colored
vision of what happened in real life.)
Nonetheless, the luminaries on display
in Voyage of the Damned are
impressive: The cast includes Faye Dunaway, Denholm Elliot, José Ferrer, Ben
Gazzara, Helmut Griem, Julie Harris, Wendy Hiller, James Mason, Malcolm
McDowell, Jonathan Pryce, Jack Warden, Orson Welles, and the great Max von
Sydow, who plays the ship’s noble captain. (Watch for Billy Jack star Tom Laughlin in a minor role as an engineer.)
Fitting the posh cast, Voyage of the
Damned is somewhat like an elevated riff on the disaster-movie genre, but
the lack of truly dramatic events means the film is less an all-star
spectacular and more an all-star mood piece. Grim, to be sure, but not
revelatory.
Voyage of the Damned: FUNKY
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