Sometimes when you’re feeling down there’s nothing else to do but lose yourself in a movie. You aren’t guaranteed a happy ending, but at least there’s a beginning, a middle, and an end. A good story will take you on a journey different from your own, with a lot more structure than we usually find in our day-to-day lives. Life’s worries and disappointments fade into the background so that we can find some catharsis in another’s struggles.
Yeah, it’s winter in Michigan.
Over the weekend I was feeling down. When it wasn’t blizzarding it was only because it was too bitterly cold to snow. I needed some time to rest after a week of challenging workouts, even if going out for a walk had been an option. And I wasn’t feeling creative beyond putting together a nice meal or two. I was drained, and it was time to fill the well of imagination.
So I watched a movie.
The Sea Wolf (1941) is based on a Jack London story that I haven’t read. Honestly, beyond the IMDb description and a friend’s high praise, I knew nothing about it. It stars the always great Edward G. Robinson (did the man ever put in a bad performance?) as an evil sea captain, John Garfield smoldering with intensity (Robinson feared he’d have a heart attack, and indeed he later did), and the lovely Ida Lupino as a woman on the run. Alexander Knox plays a London analog, the capable man, writer, voice of the audience.
Michael Curtiz (The Adventures of Robin Hood, Casablanca) directed.
Our characters are thrust into a nightmare situation, simultaneously trying to survive and escape. And I thought I was having a bad day! Robinson’s Captain Wolf is cunning, broken, and heartless. He masterfully brings all of those elements together so well that I often wasn’t thinking of his other performances and was fully invested in this one.
“There’s a price no man will pay for living.”
The film is perfectly paced, with human moments, victories, and setbacks. So often we have stories where the hero can never get his feet under him and is perpetually beat down to the point where no victory seems worth it. The Sea Wolf takes us to the brink of that without ever crossing the line. It’s a very serious film. Moments of humor are always undercut in ways that hurt yet never leave us feeling cheated.
Was I satisfied by the end? Yes, yes I was.
There’s nothing like art to sooth a broken spirit. At times I was thrilled by the stunning visuals, comforted by the characters comforting each other, and inspired by the resilience of the human spirit. Life is unfair, but in our stories we can see justice win. We know we live in a broken world, so it’s important to remind ourselves of how things are supposed to be.