The Sea Beast (Silent)
The Sea Beast (Silent)
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After the success of Beau Brummel (1924), John Barrymore signed a three-picture deal with the fledgling Warner Brothers. The studio wanted Barrymore to make Don Juan next, but the actor insisted on an adaptation of Herman Melville's classic 1851 novel Moby Dick. (Barrymore would eventually make Don Juan for Warners in 1926.) Playing up Barrymore's status as a screen idol, the filmmakers turned Captain Ahab into a romantic figure, complete with a love interest. For the role of Ahab's ladylove, Barrymore chose his future wife Dolores Costello (Barrymore exhibited so much enthusiasm during their love scenes that he upset Costello's mother, who was on set.) For the second half of the film, after Ahab loses his leg to the whale, Barrymore undergoes a monstrous physical and psychological transformation not unlike his performance in Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (1920). Worried that director Millard Webb had gone too far afield of the source material, Jack Warner enlisted Rupert Hughes (Howard's uncle) to reedit the film and rewrite the intertitles. After giving him a $1500 check for his services, Hughes returned it, saying he did it "as a favor to Herman Melville." The Sea Beast would prove to be one of Barrymore's most successful films, and he would remake it in the sound era (with the same alterations to the story) under the more faithful title Moby Dick in 1930.
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