A wrongly-convicted English gentleman goes from galley slave to pirate captain.A wrongly-convicted English gentleman goes from galley slave to pirate captain.A wrongly-convicted English gentleman goes from galley slave to pirate captain.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Marc McDermott
- Sir John Killigrew
- (as Mark MacDermott)
Wallace MacDonald
- Peter Godolphin
- (as Wallace Mac Donald)
Christina Montt
- The Infanta of Spain
- (as Christine Montt)
Fred DeSilva
- Ali
- (as Fred De Silva)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
This particular adaption of Rafael Sabatini's swashbuckling novel remains faithful to the original story. For those of us who are fans of the Errol Flynn version of The Sea Hawk and I consider it his best film, it has no resemblance to this silent film whatsoever.
In a way that's good because both versions can truly stand on their own merits. Milton Sills is the lead in this version, playing Sir Oliver Tressilian, prosperous landowner in Cornwall. He's looking to wed Enid Bennett who is the daughter of an adjacent estate, but Sills has two problems, her brother Wallace McDonald who doesn't think Sills's family is good enough and Sills's half brother Lloyd Hughes who wants Bennett for himself.
After this The Sea Hawk becomes a mixed version of The Master of Ballantrae and Ben-Hur. Sills is framed for McDonald's murder and captured by pirates who sell him to the Spaniards as a galley slave and then he gets rescued by the Moors.
When Sills gets rescued by the Moors it's his good fortune that the Pasha of Algiers takes a liking to him and he becomes their top pirate with the fearsome name of Sakr El-Bahr, The Sea Hawk.
The rest of the film follows a similar path of Sabatini's other work Captain Blood.
Warner Brothers when they remade The Sea Hawk though they didn't use the story certainly did retain several of the battle scenes which the viewer will immediately recognize. This version is every bit as grand and grandiose as the better known sound film. Sills and Bennett do indeed remind one of Errol Flynn and Brenda Marshall. And Sills in treading on territory that Douglas Fairbanks staked out delivers a fine performance, though without the flair for dramatics that Fairbanks had.
I'm definitely glad this silent classic is not lost.
In a way that's good because both versions can truly stand on their own merits. Milton Sills is the lead in this version, playing Sir Oliver Tressilian, prosperous landowner in Cornwall. He's looking to wed Enid Bennett who is the daughter of an adjacent estate, but Sills has two problems, her brother Wallace McDonald who doesn't think Sills's family is good enough and Sills's half brother Lloyd Hughes who wants Bennett for himself.
After this The Sea Hawk becomes a mixed version of The Master of Ballantrae and Ben-Hur. Sills is framed for McDonald's murder and captured by pirates who sell him to the Spaniards as a galley slave and then he gets rescued by the Moors.
When Sills gets rescued by the Moors it's his good fortune that the Pasha of Algiers takes a liking to him and he becomes their top pirate with the fearsome name of Sakr El-Bahr, The Sea Hawk.
The rest of the film follows a similar path of Sabatini's other work Captain Blood.
Warner Brothers when they remade The Sea Hawk though they didn't use the story certainly did retain several of the battle scenes which the viewer will immediately recognize. This version is every bit as grand and grandiose as the better known sound film. Sills and Bennett do indeed remind one of Errol Flynn and Brenda Marshall. And Sills in treading on territory that Douglas Fairbanks staked out delivers a fine performance, though without the flair for dramatics that Fairbanks had.
I'm definitely glad this silent classic is not lost.
- bkoganbing
- Jan 20, 2008
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaL'aigle des mers (1924) features five ships that were specially-built for the production at a reported cost of $250,000. This was done by outfitting the wooden exteriors of existing craft to the design of Fred Gabourie, known for his work in constructing props used in Buster Keaton slapstick films. The Moorish Galleass, The Spanish Galleon, and two English frigates called The Silver Heron and The Swallow.
- Quotes
Opening Title Card: The sea that breaks today on England's wave-lashed coast, thunders majestically its age-old songs of dim, forgotten yesterdays...
- ConnectionsEdited into Capitaine Blood (1935)
- How long is The Sea Hawk?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Sea Hawk
- Filming locations
- Santa Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California, USA(Spanish slave galleons)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $780,187
- Runtime2 hours 3 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content