Based on the real-life
adventures of an American sailor named Robin Lee Graham, who began a five-year
solo trip around the world while he was still a teenager, The Dove could conceivably have become a probing existential drama.
Instead, the movie’s screen time is divided unequally between sailing scenes,
which are interesting, and romantic interludes, which are not. The real Graham
met and married a fellow American, Patti Ratteree, while he was traveling, so
the filmmakers mostly treat Robin’s journey as an obstacle to his relationship
with Patti. It’s only near the end of the picture that the filmmakers start
using weather as a metaphor to investigate the deeper reasons why Robin felt
compelled to prove himself. In particular, sequences of Robin enduring a
horrific storm and suffering through a month of windless days feel like precursors
of the excellent Robert Redford film All
Is Lost (2013), which is unlikely to be surpassed anytime soon as the most
harrowing film ever made about a solo ocean voyage.
The Dove, which is named after the small sailboat that Robin
steered around the world, begins in L.A. with Robin (Joseph Bottoms) leaving
port for his long voyage. So little backstory is provided that the leading
character feels like a cipher at first, which means the early passages of The Dove provide little more than
aquatic spectacle. The storytelling gets clearer—and far less distinctive—once Robin
reaches his first major port of call, where he meets Patti (Deborah Raffin).
Around the same time, Robin begins his love/hate relationship with a series of
correspondents from World Travel
magazine, which has an exclusive on his story. (In real life, Robin worked with
National Geographic.) By about 20
minutes into its running time, The Dove
settles into a repetitive pattern: sailing scene, dry-land scene with Patti
and/or journalists, teary goodbye scene, then back to the beginning of the
cycle for another loop.
Although director Charles Jarrott and his crew do an
adequate job of shooting nautical vignettes—the storm sequence is genuinely
harrowing—the movie tends to lose energy whenever Robin docks his boat. Leading
man Bottoms (one of actor Timothy Bottoms’ three younger brothers) performs
with more sincerity than skill, so he’s rarely able to enliven stiffly written
scenes, of which The Dove has many.
Raffin fares much worse, since she was prone to wooden performances anyway;
some of her line deliveries in The Dove
are embarrassingly amateurish. Even composer John Barry falls victim to the
movie’s mediocrity, delivering one of his least interesting scores and
contributing the melody for a fruity theme song, “Sail the Summer Wind,” which
appears twice during the movie. FYI, The
Dove is one of only three features that iconic actor Gregory Peck produced;
the others are The Big Country (1958)
and The Trial of the Catonsville Nine
(1972).
The Dove:
FUNKY
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