After seeing a fellow marina tenant showing a movie on his sail last night, i think I am going to try to do the same thing.
Here are some of the movies I have seen, that I think I will show.
The Bounty - Mel Gibson/Anthony Hopkins version.
Dead Calm
Pirates Of The Caribbean
Waterworld
Captain Ron - Classic!
Summer Rental
Master and Commander: The Far Side Of The World
Wind - Just OK
White Squall
Swiss Family Robinson - 1960 Disney version
Treasure Island - 1990 version. I haven't seen it yet, but would like to.
What you got?
—
Blair White
2004 C36 MKII # 2169 "Dash"
Pacific Beach, CA
There's the one about Donald Crowhurst, Deep Water, who faked that he was winning the Golden Globe round the world race but never showed up. Not really a film I guess more of a documentary but still interesting.
Waterworld! Every critic in the world panned that movie big time but I thought it was great! I guess you're either a sailor and you get it or you aren't and you don't.
Dead Calm would get my vote. We need more ailing movies.
There was a good Lina Wurueler move but, I am not sure of the name. Swept away, maybe.
Yep, that's it available on Utube.
Cepheus dream
C36 MK I # 825
MK I Tech Editor No Mas
Speaking of Dead Calm... Unless you rig your sail to something on the dock, that's what you need in order to do this safely. :)
Seriously, though, you can also affix an old sail to something that won't move. One idea I've seen is to affix the sail to a gangway (or whatever you call the fixed jetty from the shore to the ramp down to the dock in a marina) at low tide. Then you have a "dingy-in" (as opposed to a drive-in), where people raft up. Requires a very specific marina config; I saw it years ago in Connecticut. It was pretty cool.
David
s/v Portmanteau
Hull #2133 -- 2003 MKII
Seattle, WA
Wow, I watched Swept away on Utube.
It was forty years ago when I last saw this, it was avant gaurd at the time, in sub tittles, maybe I was to busy reading to note the abuse. The Utube version was dubded in English, could not believe how inappropriate it seems today.
Cepheus dream
C36 MK I # 825
MK I Tech Editor No Mas
Oh Steve, I disagree, I really don't think we need more "ailing movies" we have plenty now! (hehehe) Sorry about that, your typing is about as bad as mine.
Actually, one of my all time favorites is White Squall, It is a great movie and to think that it is based on a true story.
It is sad that we lost the ship, the HMS Bounty in the Super Storm Sandy!
Glenn Druhot
Carpe Diem
New Bern, NC
35* 6' 10" N / 77* 2' 30" W
2001 C36, Hull #1965
Std Rig; Wing Keel; M35B
Ailing movies, and the director was Lina Wulmueler.
iPhone key pad and bad spelun.
Cepheus dream
C36 MK I # 825
MK I Tech Editor No Mas
Ailing movies, and the director was Lina Wulmueler.
iPhone key pad and bad spelun.
Cepheus dream
C36 MK I # 825
MK I Tech Editor No Mas
Blair,i have the movies you mentioned...plus
Moby Dick..Gregory Peck..very good
Billy Bud..Peter Ustinov..excellent
Captains Courageous...Spencer Tracy..good but sorta fake unlike the 2 above which are really pretty salty.
BTW,i use a Sharp projector for teaching that plugs into a PC or DVD player and will project on anything white..they were surely using something similar.Have fun.
"Sailing Still" 1990 C36 M25 wing
Sail Canada/Transport Canada training
Gibsons Harbour BC
www.landsendbc.ca
All fine choices........BUT
Your missing Jaws, Piranhas, that crocodile in Vermont or somewhere movie. How about the Steven King movie where the dead come ashore for the bell. These are especially good with kids on board. :)
Also, the spaghetti westerns or anything centered in the desert are nice on the water.
One of my favorite sailing movies is "I Sailed To Tahiti With An All Girl Crew". It's from the 60s and starred Gardner McKay. Features a couple of classic yachts in a race from Newport Beach to Tahiti. Very fun & campy. I found a copy on Ebay.
Mike
Deja Vu
1991 MK I # 1106
Marina del Rey, CA
Don't forget "Morning Light" about Roy Disney putting up a Transpac team of college sailors..... Make sure you get the Blu-Ray version...
"Fifteen young sailors... six months of intense training... one chance at the brass ring. This documentary tells the story of a group of intrepid and determined young men and women, on the cusp of adulthood, as they embark on life's first great adventure. Racing a high-performance 52-foot sloop in the TRANSPAC, the most revered of open-ocean sailing competitions, the crew of "Morning Light" matches wits and skills in a dramatic 2300 mile showdown against top professionals. From their earliest training sessions in Hawaii conducted by world-class teachers through their test of endurance on the high seas, they form an unbreakable bond in the process of becoming a singular team that is greater than the sum of its parts."
Tony
Tony Castagno
S/V Terra Nova (Hull #22)
Atlanta GA, Lake Lanier-based
1983 C-36 mkI M25XPB