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poster of Captain Horatio Hornblower
Rating: 6.8/10 by 115 users

Captain Horatio Hornblower (1951)

Captain Horatio Hornblower leads his ship HMS Lydia on a perilous transatlantic voyage, during which his faithful crew battle both a Spanish warship and a ragged band of Central American rebels.

Directing:
  • Raoul Walsh
Writing:
  • Ivan Goff
  • Ben Roberts
  • Æneas MacKenzie
  • C. S. Forester
  • C. S. Forester
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Apr 10, 1951

Rating: 6.8/10 by 115 users

Alternative Title:
El Hidalgo de los Mares - ES
Captain Horatio Hornblower - US
Πλοίαρχος Οράτιος Χόρνμπλοουερ - GR
Falcão dos Mares - BR
七海蛟龙 - CN
怒海英雄 - CN
Des Königs Admiral - DE

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 57 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: captain, battle, napoleonic wars, sea battle
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Gregory Peck
Capt. Horatio Hornblower R.N
Virginia Mayo
Lady Barbara Wellesley
Robert Beatty
Lt. William Bush
Terence Morgan
2nd Lt. Gerard
James Kenney
Midshipman Longley
Denis O'Dea
RAdm. Sir Rodney Leighton
Richard Hearne
Polwheal (Hornblower's Batman)
Michael Dolan
Surgeon Gundarson
Stanley Baker
Mr. Harrison (Bosun)
Alec Mango
El Supremo (Don Julian Alvarado)
Christopher Lee
Spanish Captain
John Witty
Capt. Entenza
Michael Goodliffe
Col. Caillard - POW Escort
Eugene Deckers
French Commandant
Ingeborg von Kusserow
Hebe (Lady Barbara's Maid)
Amy Veness
Mrs. McPhee (Hornblower's Housekeeper)
Kynaston Reeves
Adm. Lord Hood
Ronald Adam
Adm. McCartney
Chris Adcock
Crewman (uncredited)
Basil Bartlett
Capt. Elliott (uncredited)
André Belhomme
French Guard (uncredited)
David Birks
Crewman (uncredited)
Robert Cawdron
"Witch of Endor" French Mate (uncredited)
Diane Cilento
Maria Hornblower (voice) (uncredited)
Howard Connell
"Lydia" Seaman (uncredited)
Alexander Davion
Spanish Officer (uncredited)
Steve Donahue
Crewman (uncredited)
Patric Doonan
Seaman (uncredited)
Anthony Forwood
Lt. Woodford (uncredited)
Arthur Gomez
French Corvette Captain (uncredited)
Lindsay Hooper
Crewman (uncredited)
Richard Johnson
Macrae (uncredited)

John Chard

Beat To Quarters! It's fun, it's exciting, and it looks fabulous at times, it is however far from being a great movie. In the absence of Errol Flynn, Gregory Peck steps in to Hornblower's shoes and as much as he gives it his all (rumoured to have been one of his favourite performances), it's a spot of miscasting that thankfully doesn't kill the picture dead, he's just sadly a tad too straight laced to really make the role work. The same can be said for the casting of Virginia Mayo as Lady Barbara Wellesley, pretty as she is, it's an odd bit of casting that never quite comes off, yet as daft as it may sound, neither case of miscasting hurts the picture, and this comes down to the astute direction from Raoul Walsh. The pace never flags so we are never over concerned with the central actors struggles to make the characters work, backed up by Guy Green's camera work and Robert Farnon's jaunty score, the technical aspects of the piece steer the viewer on to safe waters (ahem). The sets are excellent and the recreation of the ships is first rate, with the final quarter of the movie giving us a blood pumping battle that's full of heroic bluster. It's a film that is easily recommended to adventure fans, though far from perfect and it remains a wasted opportunity in my eyes, but it's still a very enjoyable film for all the family. 6/10

CinemaSerf

This is effectively three short stories bolted together as Raoul Walsh creates quite an exciting and enjoyable seafaring story based around the Napoleonic Wars. Gregory Peck takes the lead role as the eponymous, rather stiff-necked, Royal Navy captain carrying out a mission to provision a rather unreliable ally with arms and munitions. When events in a Europe being terrorised by Napoleon take a series of more treacherous turns, he must now battle his way across the Atlantic and return to help protect his country from the French. Virginia Mayo provides the love interest and Robert Beatty and a feisty James Robertson Justice work well too, to help keep the ship off the rocks as the battle comes down to tactics and becomes personal! It is a good, old-fashioned and enjoyably paced, boy's own yarn based on the C. S Forester character and well worth watching.


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