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5.1/10
3.5K
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Stanley Kubrick's first film made in color, lost for over forty years. The documentary extols the benefits of membership to the Seafarers International Union.Stanley Kubrick's first film made in color, lost for over forty years. The documentary extols the benefits of membership to the Seafarers International Union.Stanley Kubrick's first film made in color, lost for over forty years. The documentary extols the benefits of membership to the Seafarers International Union.
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'The Seafarers' was a half hour documentary made for the Seafarers International Union in 1953. It's actually more of a promotional film than a documentary, urging sailors to join the union & extolling the benefits, etc etc. The 1950s equivalent of a corporate video or an infomercial.
There is absolutely nothing remarkable about this film. It's competently made, but it's not the sort of project where a director would have the opportunity to exercise any sort of creativity. Kubrick was a hired gun on this, he did the job he was paid for & that's it.
Any attempts to look for trademark Kubrick touches or innovation would be pointless.
There are only two things noteworthy about 'The Seafarers' - it was directed by Stanley Kubrick, and it happened to be his first film in colour. Other than the title reading 'Directed by Stanley Kubrick', I found nothing of any interest whatsoever. There's nothing wrong with it, but it would be utterly forgotten & ignored if it had not been directed by someone who went on to much greater things.
Darth Nub
There is absolutely nothing remarkable about this film. It's competently made, but it's not the sort of project where a director would have the opportunity to exercise any sort of creativity. Kubrick was a hired gun on this, he did the job he was paid for & that's it.
Any attempts to look for trademark Kubrick touches or innovation would be pointless.
There are only two things noteworthy about 'The Seafarers' - it was directed by Stanley Kubrick, and it happened to be his first film in colour. Other than the title reading 'Directed by Stanley Kubrick', I found nothing of any interest whatsoever. There's nothing wrong with it, but it would be utterly forgotten & ignored if it had not been directed by someone who went on to much greater things.
Darth Nub
Well, this very old-school narrated laudatory documentary is quite boring and did not make me more interested in Seafarers International Union, which represents, provide services and protects interests of mariners, fishermen and boatmen who work aboard vessels flagged in the United States. The very first colour film of great master Stanley Kubrick is uninteresting and may be watched only by Kubrick filmography completists (like me) or for those particularly interested in US labour unions' main concerns and strategies of achieving memberships. Considering artistic qualities (it was just an advertising film, not an artistic one), it is Kubrick's worst film, worse than previous Day of the fight and Flying padre, which are also not very interesting at all. It is amazing that just four years after The Seafarers Kubrick would be ready to make masterpiece Paths of glory.
This is The first Coloured Short/Short film done by Mr. Stanley Kubrick , it talks about seafarers and their benifets and how it's like being one of those Seafarers, this dosent feel like a really something you would watch it feels like a school project because it's a documentary but since Mr. Stanley Kubrick has directed this i wanted to see what was his first movies/short film were like
the documentary aspect of this movie is good , the narration is very good and probably the best thing about this movie , while this movie does not have high ratings i say it wasn't as bad as people say it certinaly wasn't something revolutionary but in Kubrick's eyes this was what he did 6.5/10.
the documentary aspect of this movie is good , the narration is very good and probably the best thing about this movie , while this movie does not have high ratings i say it wasn't as bad as people say it certinaly wasn't something revolutionary but in Kubrick's eyes this was what he did 6.5/10.
Kubrick's first color in the third season, right, than Lolita also used color early, but this is not a commercial advertising campaign, itself thought that this advertising director culture will only be produced in most of the domestic writer-director students, I did not think that the library is also such a way to go over, some of the footage is also quite good to make people feel that none of them are like a real record. Some of the shots are pretty good and don't feel like a real documentary. The character talking to the camera is kind of breaking the fourth wall... It's the performance that's a bit cloying, just for that look that's cringeworthy!
Seafarers, The (1953)
** (out of 4)
Overly long and dreadfully boring promotional film for the Seafarers Union, which basically tries to teach people why they should join. This is historically interesting only because it's Stanely Kubrick's first film in color. The rest is pure boredom and it's no wonder Kubrick doesn't want this film seeing the light of day.
Day of the Fight (1951)
*** (out of 4)
Kubrick's second short shows us a day in the life of a middle-weight boxer as he prepares for a fight. Even with the boring narration, this film here moves a lot better and the fight scene is rather interesting because it's shown complete as it happened. You can spot Kubrick in a few scenes with his camera.
Flying Padre (1951)
** (out of 4)
Stanley Kubrick's first film is a documentary about a priest in New Mexico who needs a plane to keep up with all his people. This is a really boring and flat film even with its 9 minute running time. The priest really isn't that interesting and the narration is flat and stiff. God knows better things were to follow from Kubrick.
** (out of 4)
Overly long and dreadfully boring promotional film for the Seafarers Union, which basically tries to teach people why they should join. This is historically interesting only because it's Stanely Kubrick's first film in color. The rest is pure boredom and it's no wonder Kubrick doesn't want this film seeing the light of day.
Day of the Fight (1951)
*** (out of 4)
Kubrick's second short shows us a day in the life of a middle-weight boxer as he prepares for a fight. Even with the boring narration, this film here moves a lot better and the fight scene is rather interesting because it's shown complete as it happened. You can spot Kubrick in a few scenes with his camera.
Flying Padre (1951)
** (out of 4)
Stanley Kubrick's first film is a documentary about a priest in New Mexico who needs a plane to keep up with all his people. This is a really boring and flat film even with its 9 minute running time. The priest really isn't that interesting and the narration is flat and stiff. God knows better things were to follow from Kubrick.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough often referred to as a "documentary", this is actually a promotional film, made for the Seafarers International Union.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Art of Stanley Kubrick: From Short Films to Strangelove (2000)
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