The incredible story of amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst and his solo attempt to circumnavigate the globe. The struggles he confronted on the journey while his family awaited his return is on... Read allThe incredible story of amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst and his solo attempt to circumnavigate the globe. The struggles he confronted on the journey while his family awaited his return is one of the most enduring mysteries of recent times.The incredible story of amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst and his solo attempt to circumnavigate the globe. The struggles he confronted on the journey while his family awaited his return is one of the most enduring mysteries of recent times.
- Awards
- 1 win total
- Chamber Member
- (as Richard Blaine)
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Featured reviews
This is his story.
The first half of the movie concerns itself with the technical, financial and emotional aspects of the trip.
There are some obvious hurdles to this proposed jaunt around the globe.
The main character lacks money, experience, time and the most rudimentary knowledge of sailing in the high seas.
Because of the stiff-upper-lipness of the period everyone is very optimistic and polite about what appears, at first hand, his obvious suicide mission.
The back end of the film is about the race.
Watching someone bob around on the sea in a tiny boat it turns out is very, very dull.
This cast do a grand job bringing the reserved characters to life; Rachel Weisz easily steals the show .
The film is non-judgmental, non-sensational and well crafted.
It is nice to watch something that hangs around in second gear; but saying that it does (ironically) make for quite a dry watch.
This is a perfect film for a Sunday when you feel like something serious but not too taxing.
While threatening to but never completely sailing to grand heights, Marsh's examination of the true story of amateur British sailor Donald Crowhurst and his quest to circumnavigate the ocean during the famous Times Golden Globe boat race in 1968 is a well-crafted and acted tale that sees Marsh on the best form of his career outside of Wire's release.
Filled with an almost unbearable foreshadowing of bad times and poor decisions, Marsh captures both the commendable sense of the will to accomplish something that drove Crowhurst to life changing decisions such as banking on his family home to finish the race through to the dread and terror that one can expect when traversing the wilds of the ocean alone on a yacht for near on one whole year.
It's an impressively crafted film and one that's anchored by a committed and physically embodied Colin Firth as the increasingly unhinged and mentally tormented Crowhurst.
In what acts as a nice escape for Firth from roles where he is more the dashing rougue rather than the downtrodden everyday blue collar sap, Firth is hugely impressive as Crowhurst, a man whose decisions we can't exactly condone but a man whose demise is still heartbreakingly real, raw and quietly haunting.
With Firth and Marsh both on fine form, its a shame The Mercy finds itself petering out towards its latter stages as the film gets bogged down covering similar ground while a drawn out finale starts to feel to agenda based and cinematically sappy, in turn zapping The Mercy from its solid and often captivating early work.
Final Say -
A strong, well-filmed drama that's a nice return to form for Marsh and a solid change of pace for Firth, The Mercy may not be a must-see but if a true life drama is what you are seeking, The Mercy has you covered.
3 1/2 home-made boats out of 5
The script and pacing are rather generic in its box-ticking of events, the usual cliched news report voice overs and discussions in pubs chugging along the events in a necessary manner, while divorcing us from whatever Crowhurst experienced on his own, hearing of the travails of his competitors and how they variously piled new pressure upon his unfolding catastrophe. The second half of the film would have benefitted without showing any other characters at all. Of course his family were suffering from their hopes, of course his publicist and financier were taking advantage of him, but there was no of course about how Crowhurst's decent into madness led him to writing about 'cosmic beings'. The most intriguing part of the story remains untold, and it could only be examined through more isolation, more of the sea.
Beyond that, Colin Firth is miscast. Crowhurst was an eccentric, he was dashing and goofy at the same time, vigorously intelligent and utterly misguided, and Firth makes the whole terrible misadeventure look like the misspent Sunday afternoon of a Daily Telegraph reader. I suppose Firth was required for funding? Hardly his fault thoigh, but this role needed Hugh Bonneville, Martin Freeman, or a more left-field actor.
Did you know
- TriviaAt age 55, Colin Firth was 20 years older than Donald Crowhurst was when he set off on the Golden Globe race.
- GoofsWhen the Teignmouth Electron is leaving harbour, the yachts in the background have a stern shape that's about 40 years too modern.
- Quotes
Sir Francis Chichester: A man alone on a boat is more alone than any man alive.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Projector: The Mercy (2018)
- SoundtracksMaria Elena
Written by Lorenzo Barcelata
Performed by Los Indios Tabajaras
- How long is The Mercy?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Mercy
- Filming locations
- Teignmouth, Devon, England, UK(Exterior)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $18,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $29,538
- Gross worldwide
- $4,536,348
- Runtime
- 1h 52m(112 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1