Current:Home > StocksWilliam Friedkin's stodgy 'Caine Mutiny' adaptation lacks the urgency of the original -TrueNorth Capital Hub
William Friedkin's stodgy 'Caine Mutiny' adaptation lacks the urgency of the original
View
Date:2025-04-27 08:13:42
Back in the 1970s, Hollywood was roused from its torpor by a collection of brilliant, difficult, occasionally berserk filmmakers, including Francis Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Robert Altman and Elaine May. This crew of easy riders and raging bulls, to borrow from the title of the book by Peter Biskind, pushed movies to the center of American culture.
One of the raging-est bulls, William Friedkin, died on Aug. 7 at the age of 87. Friedkin became a superstar director thanks to two hugely influential hits — The French Connection and The Exorcist, whose 50th anniversary is this year. These movies popularized a visceral, in-your-face style of filmmaking that too many directors have since embraced. But like many in that hubristic time, Friedkin overreached. After his 1977 thriller Sorcerer flopped, he spent the decades that followed making movies — some interesting, some not — yet never again caught the zeitgeist.
Few things could sound less zeitgeisty than his final film, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial. Launching this week on Paramount+ and Showtime, it's an updated version of a stage play adapted from Herman Wouk's 1951 novel, itself the source of the 1954 movie starring Humphrey Bogart. Where Wouk's original story centered on events aboard a navy ship in the World War II Pacific, Friedkin's movie is a bare-bones courtroom drama about a naval mutiny in the present-day Persian Gulf.
Jake Lacy, whom you'll know from The White Lotus, plays Lt. Steve Maryk, the honest, fresh-faced first officer of the U.S.S. Caine. He's charged with mutinously ousting the ship's captain, Philip Francis Queeg — that's Kiefer Sutherland — during a typhoon that threatened to sink the ship. Maryk is defended by Lt. Barney Greenwald — that's Jason Clarke, who recently played the villainous inquisitor in Oppenheimer — a naval lawyer who's been essentially ordered to handle the case.
And so the trial proceeds, with the prosecutor — played by a steely Monica Raymund — trotting out witnesses to demonstrate that Capt. Queeg was fit to command. In response, Greenwald seeks to show the court, led by the late Lance Reddick in his final screen role, that Queeg is, in fact, a petty, compulsive tyrant who cracks under pressure. In essence, Queeg, too, is on trial.
Although stodgy, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial is the kind of well-oiled theatrical vehicle that actors love being part of. Always sneaky good, Sutherland finds a likable side to Capt. Queeg that the saturnine Bogart didn't. Lacy deftly tiptoes the line between Maryk being honorable and credulous. And Clarke bristles as Greenwald, who's irked that, in order to save Maryk, he'll need to destroy Queeg.
The original story resonated in a '50s America where countless ordinary men, like Wouk himself, had served during World War II and knew the life-and-death stakes of commanders' decisions in the Pacific theater. But this version is set in the Persian Gulf with an all-volunteer navy and no sea battles. It has no present-day urgency. The only thing that feels truly modern is the diversity of the cast.
While Friedkin made his name with movies that worked you over, he was actually an erudite man interested in the world around him. What attracted him to this story is not, I think, a fascination with military justice in World War II or the Gulf. Rather, the film is better seen as an elaborate metaphor, an old man's oblique commentary on a contemporary society that, he feels, doesn't like to grapple with the messy complexity of human behavior and the elusiveness of truth; a society that rushes to harsh judgment of individuals, ignoring the totality of their deeds and condemning their trespasses, even minor ones.
Which may be another way of saying that the movie is personal. Although peak Friedkin was closer to Capt. Ahab than Capt. Queeg, he knew what it was like to be called a tyrant and monomaniac and be attacked for the politics of some of his movies. Given his own checkered career, it feels fitting that his valedictory film should be about the slippery morality of those who cast the first stone.
veryGood! (26)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Gaetz plans to oust McCarthy from House speakership after shutdown vote: 5 Things podcast
- Health care has a massive carbon footprint. These doctors are trying to change that
- Chiefs vs Jets Sunday Night Football highlights: Kansas City wins, Taylor Swift celebrates
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Jodie Turner-Smith Files for Divorce From Joshua Jackson After 4 Years of Marriage
- MLB wild-card series predictions: Who's going to move on in 2023 playoffs?
- New York Gov. Kathy Hochul says last-minute disaster assistance is unconscionable after record-breaking rain
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- LeBron James says Bronny is doing well, working to play for USC this season after cardiac episode
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Cambodian court bars environmental activists from traveling to Sweden to receive ‘Alternative Nobel’
- New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez expected back in Manhattan court for bribery case
- Almost entire ethnic Armenian population has fled enclave
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Can AI be trusted in warfare?
- Environmental groups demand emergency rules to protect rare whales from ship collisions
- Government sues Union Pacific over using flawed test to disqualify color blind railroad workers
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Missing postal worker's mom pushing for answers 5 years on: 'I'm never gonna give up'
S-W-I-F-T? Taylor Swift mania takes over Chiefs vs. Jets game amid Travis Kelce dating rumors
Massive emergency alert test scheduled to hit your phone on Wednesday. Here's what to know.
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Unlawful crossings along southern border reach yearly high as U.S. struggles to contain mass migration
DNA helps identify killer 30 years after Florida woman found strangled to death
Brain surgery left TOKiMONSTA unable to understand music. Now every song is precious