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The Sea Hawk (1940)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Release Date:
1 July 1940 (USA)
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Tagline:
Dashing . . . romantic . . . Errol Flynn at his thrilling best! more
Plot:
Geoffrey Thorpe is an adventurous and dashing pirate, who feels that he should pirate the Spanish ships for the good of England...
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Awards:
Nominated for 4 Oscars.
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NewsDesk:
(2 articles)
A Career-Spanning Conversation with Joe Dante
(From Fangoria. 11 October 2009, 4:32 PM, PDT)
Gladiator Director Plans Captain Kidd Movie
(From WENN. 7 February 2001)
(From Fangoria. 11 October 2009, 4:32 PM, PDT)
Gladiator Director Plans Captain Kidd Movie
(From WENN. 7 February 2001)
User Comments:
Capstone to Errol Flynn's Swashbucklers!
more (49 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Errol Flynn | ... | Captain Geoffrey Thorpe | |
| Brenda Marshall | ... | Doña Maria Alvarez de Cordoba | |
| Claude Rains | ... | Don José Alvarez de Cordoba | |
| Donald Crisp | ... | Admiral Sir John Burleson | |
| Flora Robson | ... | Queen Elizabeth | |
| Alan Hale | ... | Carl Pitt | |
| Henry Daniell | ... | Lord Wolfingham | |
| Una O'Connor | ... | Miss Marthe Latham | |
| James Stephenson | ... | Abbott | |
| Gilbert Roland | ... | Captain Lopez | |
| William Lundigan | ... | Danny Logan | |
| Julien Mitchell | ... | Oliver Scott | |
| Montagu Love | ... | King Phillip II | |
| J.M. Kerrigan | ... | Eli Matson | |
| David Bruce | ... | Martin Burke |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Beggars of the Sea (USA) (working title)
El halcón del mar (Spain) (Venezuela) [es]
L'aigle des mers (Belgium: French title) (France) [fr]
De zeearend (Belgium: Flemish title) [un]
Der Herr der sieben Meere (West Germany) [de]
Der Seefalke (Austria) [de]
Havørnen (Denmark) [da]
Lo sparviero del mare (Italy) [it]
Merihaukka (Finland) [fi]
Morski jatrzab (Poland) [pl]
O Gavião do Mar (Brazil) [pt]
O Gavião dos Mares (Portugal) [pt]
Oi aetoi ton thalasson (Greece) [el]
Slaghöken (Sweden) [sv]
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El halcón del mar (Spain) (Venezuela) [es]
L'aigle des mers (Belgium: French title) (France) [fr]
De zeearend (Belgium: Flemish title) [un]
Der Herr der sieben Meere (West Germany) [de]
Der Seefalke (Austria) [de]
Havørnen (Denmark) [da]
Lo sparviero del mare (Italy) [it]
Merihaukka (Finland) [fi]
Morski jatrzab (Poland) [pl]
O Gavião do Mar (Brazil) [pt]
O Gavião dos Mares (Portugal) [pt]
Oi aetoi ton thalasson (Greece) [el]
Slaghöken (Sweden) [sv]
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Parents Guide:
Runtime:
109 min (re-release) | 127 min (original version)
Country:
Language:
Color:
Black and White |
Black and White (Sepiatone) (some sequences)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Certification:
Portugal:M/6 |
USA:Approved (certificate #6090) |
UK:U |
Australia:G |
New Zealand:PG |
Finland:K-11 (DVD rating) |
France:U |
Finland:S |
Sweden:15
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The beautifully crafted costumes seen in "The Sea Hawk" were made for Flynn’s movie from the year before called The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939). Reusing them saved Warner Bros. a huge amount of money, since the costumes were heavily researched, meticulously created and costly in their day.
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Goofs:
Boom mic visible: When what's left of Captain Thorpe and his men are coming back to their ship after being ambushed by the Spanish, you can see the shadow of a boom mic on the upper right portion of the ship on the screen.
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Quotes:
[first lines]
King Philip II: The riches of the New World are limitless, and the New World is ours - with our ships carrying the Spanish flag on seven seas, our armies sweeping over Africa, the Near East, and the Far West; invincible everywhere... but on our own doorstep. Only northern Europe holds out against us; why? Tell me, why?
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King Philip II: The riches of the New World are limitless, and the New World is ours - with our ships carrying the Spanish flag on seven seas, our armies sweeping over Africa, the Near East, and the Far West; invincible everywhere... but on our own doorstep. Only northern Europe holds out against us; why? Tell me, why?
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in Coming Attractions: The History of the Movie Trailer (2006)
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Soundtrack:
Strike for the Shores of Dover
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FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (49 total)
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THE SEA HAWK is usually listed with THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD and CAPTAIN BLOOD as Errol Flynn's finest films, an honor it richly deserves. Filmed in 1940, at the peak of Flynn's popularity, before the sensational rape trial and revelations of his hedonistic lifestyle combined to tarnish his reputation and gradually make his screen persona more of a roué and less heroic, the film combined all of the classic 'Flynn' elements; spectacular battles, a chaste but passionate romance, wonderful camaraderie, a thoroughly despicable villain, and a climactic light/shadow sword fight finale to top things off, accompanied by the fabulous music of Erich Wolfgang Korngold. This is a FABULOUS film adventure!
Based on the privateering adventures of Sir Francis Drake and the 'Sea Dogs' of Elizabethan times, the WB lifted the title from a Rafael Sabatini novel, and changed the 'Sea Dogs' to 'Sea Hawks' (which DOES sound more romantic!). Flynn is Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe, a brilliant commander in the 'Horatio Hornblower' mold, adored by his crew (led by the irreplaceable Alan Hale, of course!), admired by his fellow Sea Hawks, and even respected by his Spanish adversaries. As the film opens, his ship, the Albatross, having crossed the Atlantic in record time, takes on a giant Spanish galleon carrying the new Ambassador to England (Claude Rains, in a small but memorable role) and his daughter, Maria (played by the luminous Brenda Marshall, who has always been unfairly judged as a 'substitute' for Olivia de Havilland; Miss de Havilland would have been totally wrong in the role of an innocent Spanish girl!) After a breathtaking battle, featuring the kind of cutlass-swinging pandemonium director Michael Curtiz was famous for, Thorpe is victorious, and the Spaniards and their cargo are transferred to the Albatross. (Wonderful Hispanic actor Gilbert Roland has a nice bit as the Spanish captain, granted the right to be the last to leave his sinking ship).
Thorpe is immediately smitten by Maria, but, in true Hornblower fashion, is uncomfortable trying to talk to her, much to the amusement of his crew! This discomfort doesn't apply to ALL women, however; to Queen Elizabeth, wonderfully portrayed by Flora Robson (for the second time, as she'd played the Virgin Queen in the earlier FIRE OVER ENGLAND), Thorpe displays a rakish charm that she secretly adores. (This was Flynn's second film in two years dealing with the monarch; as lover/potential usurper to a more neurotic Elizabeth, played by Bette Davis, in 1939's THE PRIVATE LIVES OF ELIZABETH AND ESSEX, she chopped off his head...something Davis, who despised Flynn, would have liked to have done in real life, as well!)
Despite the growing love between Maria and Thorpe, he has a brilliant scheme, attacking a Spanish treasure port in Central America by land, so he's off again, with Elizabeth's secret blessings. Unfortunately, traitorous Lord Wolfingham (played to slimy perfection by Henry Daniell), figures out the plan, and warns the Spanish, who defeat Thorpe and his crew in the jungle (a wonderful, sepia-toned sequence), then subjects the survivors to a life chained to the oars of a Spanish galleon. Discovering Wolfingham's duplicity, and ultimate goal of power after the Spanish Armada crushes England, Thorpe and his crew manage to break free of their chains, capture the Spanish ship, and race back to England, culminating in a spectacular climactic duel between Thorpe and Wolfingham, and Elizabeth's rousing "We'll build an Armada" speech added to the script to inspire an audience witnessing the beginning of WWII.
A rousing adventure, THE SEA HAWK marked the pinnacle of Errol Flynn's rollercoaster career, and is a true classic of the genre!