RSS
 

Search results for ‘Pirate’

The Essentials: 5 Of Michael Curtiz’s Greatest Films, On The 50th Anniversary Of His Death

15 Apr

 

 

With the arrival of the auteur theory, filmmakers like Michael Curtiz no longer get as much sway among the current generation of directors. Curtiz (born Kertész Kaminer Manó in Hungary in 1886), was a journeyman, a man who flourished in the studio system after being picked out by Jack Warner for his Austrian Biblical epic “Moon of Israel” in 1924. He stayed at the studio for nearly 20 years, taking on whatever he was assigned at a terrifyingly prolific rate — he made over 100 Hollywood movies up to “The Comancheros” in 1961. And some of them are terrible, as you might expect.

But Curtiz was also responsible for some of the greatest films of the era, and those who diminish his abilities (including the director himself, who once said “Who cares about character? I make it go so fast nobody notices”) are ignoring his enormous skill behind the camera, and his undeniable capacity for getting great performances out of some of the biggest stars in history. And slowly, his reputation has been restored over time – Steven Soderbergh (who, coincidentally, joins Curtiz as one of only two filmmakers to pick up two Best Director Oscar nominations in the same year; Curtiz for “Angels With Dirty Faces” and “Four Daughters,” Soderbergh for “Traffic” and “Erin Brockovich“)  has praised his work, and the younger filmmaker’s “The Good German” is in many ways a tribute to his forerunner.

Curtiz died fifty years ago today, on April 10th 1962, and to commemorate the anniversary, we’ve picked out five of the director’s finest works as a starting point for those who want to dig into his wider career. There’s plenty more gems where these came from — the filmmaker was incredibly versatile, ranging from action-adventure to musicals, comedies to melodrama — but these are the five highlights of a colossal output.

The Adventures of Robin Hood” (1938)
In 1935, Curtiz had helped popularize and legitimize the cinematic swashbuckler with “Captain Blood,” a thrilling pirate tale that picked up a Best Picture Oscar nomination, and saw Curtiz come second in the director category, despite not having been nominated (write-in votes still held some power back then…) Three years later, Curtiz returned to the big screen, along with his ‘Blood’ stars Errol Flynn (who would become a favorite of the filmmaker: this was their second of twelve collaborations) and Olivia De Haviland, having refined and perfected the formula, with “The Adventures of Robin Hood.” In fact, Flynn wasn’t the first choice: Jimmy Cagney had originally been targeted for the part, but left Warners, causing a huge delay until Flynn eventually took over. And it’s hard to imagine anyone else in the part: Flynn’s roguish charm and sheer pleasure in his adventures (a far cry from the joyless takes by Kevin Costner or Russell Crowe) has defined Robin Hood for generations to come. And his supporting cast are absolutely his match — de Havilland is sweet as Marion, and having Basil Rathbone and Claude Rains as the pair of sniveling villains is pretty much an unmatchable combination (it’s like having Gary Oldman and Alan Rickman playing a duo of evildoers today). Despite the attempts of Costner and Ridley Scott over the years, this is still the definitive cinematic take on the British outlaw who robs from the rich to give to the poor, with genuinely glorious Technicolor (the film was only the studio’s second experiment with color at the time), and action sequences as thrilling as anything that’s ever been seen on screen — principally because so much is done for real, right down to the famous scene of the arrow being split in two (albeit aided by bamboo arrows and wires). It’s perhaps too sincere and irony-free for contemporary audiences, but it remains one of best action-adventure movies in cinematic history.

Angels With Dirty Faces” (1938)
The dawning of the Production Code era meant that, however popular the gangster picture was, it would always end the same way: the antihero would meet his demise, normally through a hail of bullets, to demonstrate to the audience that crime didn’t pay. But that ending’s rarely been pulled off with as much a sense of genuine tragedy as Curtiz managed with “Angels With Dirty Faces.” It’s a familiar tale by now, following two kids from the wrong side of the tracks who take divergent paths. After Rocky (James Cagney) takes the fall for a streetcar robbery pulled with his pal Jerry (the actor’s great friend Pat O’Brien, who would co-star in nine films across nearly forty-five years, up to 1981′s “Ragtime“), the former would grow up to be a powerful mobster, the latter a priest, trying to keep kids — played by the young actors who would go on to be the Dead End Kids/Bowery Boys – on the straight-and-narrow. But Jerry’s drawn back in when Rocky comes up against a pair of sinister businessmen, Frazier (Humphrey Bogart) and Keefer (George Bancroft); Rocky kills them when they target Jerry, who’s about to expose their corruption, and is sentenced to death. To stop his death becoming a martyrdom to the kids, Jerry persuades Rocky to go the electric chair as a coward, and he dies screaming. It’s undoubtedly moralistic, but the relationship between Cagney and O’Brien feels so etched in truth that it carries a weight and heft that’s rare for even the golden era of gangster movies. Curtiz is in fine, noirish form, particular in the climactic shootout, and the rat-a-tat script (thanks in part to a polish from Ben Hecht andCharles MacArthur) remains eminently quotable.

The Sea Wolf” (1941)
Never released on DVD in the U.S., and mostly forgotten by this point, surviving principally through rare TV airings, Curtiz’s adaptation of Jack London‘s sea-set adventure is probably the best candidate for the hidden gem of the director’s filmography. The story follows a writer (Alexander Knox) and an escaped convict (Ida Lupino, excellent as a character invented for the screen by writer Robert Rossen of “All The King’s Men” and “The Hustler” fame), who are caught in a shipwreck, and retrieved by the tyrannical Captain Wolf Larsen (Edward G. Robinson), who faces mutiny from his cabin boy, George Leach (John Garfield). Rossen’s script is a model of great adaptation, departing from London’s text to make it more cinematic while still capturing its spirit and its characters, and given it was released as the Second World War was underway, Larsen’s near-fascistic figurehead has a resonance that still rings today. It’s one of Curtiz’s most complex works — a world away from another Flynn vehicle, swashbuckler “The Sea Hawk,” which landed the year before — with a psychological realism that would pave the way towards the likes of “Mildred Pierce.” And once more, there’s a titanic star performance at its center. Edward G. Robinson was best known for gangster movies like his star turn in “Little Caesar,” but he gives arguably his finest performance here as Larsen, a complex monster who isn’t without his moments of sympathy; his final scene, blind and raging, going down with the boat, is staggeringly brilliant work. The film suffers a little from a rather bland protagonist in Alexander Knox, but for the most part it’s a forgotten classic that we hope turns up on the Warner Archive sooner rather than later.

Casablanca” (1942)
Based on a play that was, by all accounts, pretty terrible, and made under a frantic production that had a well-documented casting back-and-forth, few expected “Casablanca” to be anything but a forgettable programmer, a cash-in on the now-overshadowed 1938 box office hit “Algiers.” That it became a Best Picture winner (and responsible for Curtiz’s only directing Oscar), and one of the greatest American movies ever made, is a case of how, every so often, the stars align just in the right way. Because “Casablanca” is perfect across the board: a rich, gripping story, told through a script that never puts a foot wrong forward (thanks to the Epstein Brothers,Howard Koch and an uncredited Casey Robinson), helmed with uncanny sense of pace and tone by Curtiz and performed by a colorful, charismatic cast that once more showed the director’s capacity for picking the right face for a part (has any supporting cast ever matched the likes of Claude Rains, Conrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre here?). And the film is a tricky balancing act, because it has everything that you could want in a movie — comedy, thrills, a great love story — but it takes a craftsman in the best sense of the word to make the elements work in harmony, and one can only wonder what would have happened if original choice, William Wyler, had helmed the film instead. Technically, it’s superb too: DoPArthur Edeson, who was also behind “The Maltese Falcon” and “Frankenstein,” was perhaps the finest cinematographer working at the time, and he lights Ingrid Bergman perhaps better than anyone’s ever lit a star, while giving the North African setting an unforgettable noirish tinge. If you’ve somehow never seen it, drop whatever you’re doing and fix that.

Mildred Pierce” (1945)
By 1945, Joan Crawford had been a star for twenty years, but wasn’t exactly at the peak of her career: she’d been labeled as box office poison in 1937, and was bought out of her contract by MGM for $100,000. She went across town to Warner Bros in 1943, wanting to star in a movie version of “Ethan Frome,” but when that film didn’t happen, she stepped in for nemesis Bette Davis on an adaptation of James M. Cain‘s “Mildred Pierce,” despite the initial objections of Curtiz, who had to be convinced by a screen test. But the gamble paid off in a big way in the film that sees Crawford play a self-made woman, the owner of a chain of restaurants, tormented by her horrible little shit of a social-climbing daughter. It proved to be a major hit, and Crawford won a Best Actress Academy Award, putting her right back on top again. And even in light of Todd Haynes‘ five-hour HBOminiseries last year, an excellent, religiously faithful take on the same material that dumps the noirish murder subplot, Curtiz’s film holds up today in a big way. The director’s expressionistic experiments in light and shadow reach their apex here, with a flashback structure that feels like a knowing nod at “Citizen Kane,” and as ever, the cast is immaculate, and the pacing moves along at a neat clip. But ultimately, it’s Crawford’s show, and she’s phenomenal in the film. Her hunger to get back on top is almost palpable, but there’s little ego to the performance, with a maternal love that had rarely been seen from the actress before, and a true heartbreak when she sees how little gratitude her little monster Veda (Ann Blyth) has for her. As superb as Kate Winslet was in Haynes’ version, it’s always going to be Crawford that’s associated with the role.

Honorable Mentions: Most of his pictures with Flynn, including the aforementioned “Captain Blood,” “Charge of the Light Brigade,” “Dodge City,” “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex” and “Sante Fe Trail,” are worth checking out, while his Oscar nominated work on musical “Four Daughters” is pleasant entertainment (as are “White Christmas” and “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” the latter of which has dated a little, but features a brilliant performance from James Cagney). He also virtually invented the sitcom, in big-screen form, with William Powell in “Life With Father” and helmed one of Elvis Presley‘s best films, “King Creole.”

— tassie devil

 
5 Comments

Posted in Main Page

 

Errol’s Film, “The Sea Hawk” in Russian

15 Jan

This photo of “The Sea Hawk” (1940) is translated from Russian. It was called, “The Royal Pirates” in the USSR.

— Mary Ann

 
11 Comments

Posted in Films

 

Interesting News for The Errol Flynn Blog…

11 Jun

Dear Members of The Errol Flynn Blog, I have discovered some interesting news that concerns all of us at the blog. While seeking some information about a prematurely closed ticket of mine at the support desk for this blog at Domainmonger, I received the following reply:

From:


To:
zacapublishing@gmail.com:


Sorry that was closed. We just learned that our blogging platform is
closing up shop in a few months. We are working on a method to move
clients over to wordpress blogs, and will be getting back to you in the
next 2 weeks with that option. Until then, there nothing to do about the
spam issue, but the wordpress platform should fix this problem.

- Domainmonger Support

So it seems we will be moving!

I do not know what this means exactly for the style of the blog we are accustomed to or the functions we enjoy here as opposed to what will be available at the new home of The Errol Flynn Blog, but it is inevitable that we are going to seek shelter in a new harbor…

I will let you know more about the move as soon as I am offered the option to move us over to WordPress. I see no alternatives here, at the moment. We have four years of posts, comments and photos accumulated on this blog, and all of it will have to be exported to a new home! This may not be a difficult job for Domainmonger to accomplish but time will tell…

We'll make the transition as easy as possible for everybody, and I will let you all know what is happening and when as soon as I get the details of the process from Domainmonger. Meantime, we sail onward…

— David DeWitt

 
 

Pirate party on Catalina Isle

28 May

I haven't got the foggiest idea if this above mentioned short MGM  (1935), 2 reel film has been discussed before? If so, well, no need to comment I suppose.

— Jan

 
 

Errol Flynn in Mallorca! Video translation!

14 Apr



May I introduce to you Maria del Carmen Vivo Belando,

which gives me a great
pleasure
and I
hope you will appreciate it as much

as I do for this wonderful post she brings
to us!

 

A
while back Maria del Carmen Vivo Belando contacted me via Facebook due to my
EF site.

Maria is living in Spain
and her family affectionately calls her Mamen,

combining Maria and Carmen into
Marmen.  Marmen is a friend of Ventura
Sala who we know

lives in Mallorca and with whom we
are very well acquainted on our blog. 

 

We
corresponded and we acquainted ourselves for which I am extremely happy and
grateful

as it started a wonderful friendship. In our conversations about Errol
she offered to translate

the Spanish video we have on our blog from Ventura posted by David
which you find on the

blog – titled “From Ventura Sala, a wonderful Flynn
docu!”

Click the red link: “Ventura Sala Docu” which is the Spanish video and follow the translation.  

 

I am told that some people could not find the video I am placing the URL here to:

http://www.rtve.es/alacarta/videos/television/baleares-viaje-tiempo—errol-frynn-glamour-50/624731/


Needless
to say Mamen went through enormous work to translate the important parts of

the
video concerning Errol which is the greater part of the video.

Mamen
doesn’t speak English and used an Internet translator to send me the
information.  

Her translations arrived in
segments and I corrected certain grammar problems which are

common in these
translations without changing the meaning.

 

I
urged Mamen to make the post to our blog herself, but I was unable to convince
her, I am

therefore posting it on her behalf.  

The
following words are Mamen’s correspondence with me and I thought that they are
a

wonderful introduction to the translation of the video and in particular
express her sentiment.

 

Mamen
writes:

When
I first saw the video tears came to my eyes. Errol Flynn was different, he was
special! 

Some
people tell me that they do not understand why I admire him because he drank a
lot, was

a womanizer, … But these people do not know how he really was, I
admired him as an actor and

wanted to know what kind of person he was. Now, that
I found out I admire him more!

I found pages of a newspaper in Mallorca where they talked about Errol in Palma and spoke of

the
family named Sala. Ventura spoke in interviews
and his mother too as Edward, Ventura’s

father, had died.  So I thought it would
be wonderful to meet Ventura
and talk with him.

One day by chance in an Internet forum, which talked about
Errol Flynn, I saw that one comment

was from Ventura Sala on the forum and his
email appeared. I was nervous and excited at the

opportunity to write and speak
with him, so I did not think and I sent an e-mail. We had contact

by e-mail. We
conversed and he was very nice and charming. One day my boyfriend had to go

to Palma and took me with him, so I contacted Ventura and said it would be my first visit to

Palma.

 

Although
I did not expect anything, Ventura asked me to
meet him and to see Palma,
where Errol

was teaching him swimming and told me all about it.  We met at the Yacht Club, he did not have

much time, he was waiting his family so we were all at the club, he showed me
where the Zaca

was docked, and told me stories of Errol, he showed me a photo
album and original documents.

The photos displayed on the video are all from Ventura. He gave me a
book about Errol in Palma,

and a cartoon whose
protagonist is Errol in Palma.
For me it was wonderful to meet him, he was

very kind for giving his time.
Ventura loves
to talk about Errol and collects a lot of things about him.

When Ventura
was a boy he was playing on the boat with Arnella. Errol taught Ventura how

to swim by
tying a rope around his waist and he threw him overboard into the sea.

 

Rory
Flynn is a friend on facebook with him and he talks to people from other
countries. 

I have to use the translator
because I do not speak English.

 

I
want to tell you a very nice story Ventura
told me. Once on the boat deck was Edward Sala

his father, and he saw that
Errol was going to the street with a hole in the pants on his behind.

Eduardo
said Errol your pants are ripped. Errol then went back to the boat and put tape
to

cover the hole. Errol went on deck and asked gracefully Eduardo: “Eduardo, can
you see

my ass”?  Eduardo said no. And he
was well into the street when he laughed out loud – hahaha!
He did not mind walking the streets of Palma
with a pair of trousers with a plaster on his ass.

That's what I like about
Errol, who was a simple person, a person close to the people, accessible. 

He was not your typical Hollywood
actor who lives in his mansion and does not allow anyone

near him. As Toni
Riera said who was a sailor on his yacht, he was a true sailor, he was a
friend,

he was one of us!

I would really like blogging on your blog, but I have to see how it works, I
cannot wait to have

time to enter your blog and participate in it. Ventura certainly also will be
pleased.  It is very nice.
Mamen




Errol
Flynn and the glamor of the 1950’!

image


The Sailing Club “Real Club Nautico de Palma” in the 1950's where Errol docked his boat!

This link brings you to the club of today:  http://www.realclubnauticopalma.com

 

The
first part of the video tells of how many celebrities were seeking anonymity
and try to take

a rest in Palma de Mallorca, like Charles Chaplin with his
wife.  But among all the famous actors

who visited the island, none installed such depth with the Mallorcans as did
Errol Flynn. 

In December 1950, in Monte Carlo, he married
the young actress Patricia Wymore.

During their honeymoon trip aboard his yacht
Zaca, being surprised by a storm on their way

to Gibraltar they took refuge in
a port in northern Mallorca. During his stay he casually toured the north

coast of the island and he finally reached the pier in Palma where they landed.



JOSEP
PLANAS says: “I had a good relationship with the yacht club director Dr.
Porcel.

I
said to him, tonight we are here with Errol Flynn. There was a dance group
performing and

I made pictures of Errol Flynn in the yacht club.  It was a very spectacular event.”
“The island was unknown to him and he was very pleased that had been received
so well.

The people liked him right from the beginning and he promised to
return, perhaps to even

shoot a movie”.
In May 1955, as promised, Errol returned to Mallorca,
accompanied by his wife Patricia and

his daughter Arnella.

 

For
twenty years, that privileged adventurer had been one of the most famous
leading men

and had represented some of the most fascinating and heroic roles
in film history.  But at

the time, Errol
Flynn was ruined due to a failed movie production.  The producers had

canceled their contracts
and he had been abandoned by everyone.  
He decided to leave

America
with his family and live on the Zaca. 
Where he recalled his youthful adventures,

when he went to look for gold
in New Guinea.  Lost at sea and in command of his crew, Errol

Flynn could play the part of his life and could go on believing it that he was
a Hollywood

star while he discovered that the great Errol Flynn no longer
existed.

 

PERE
SERRA says: “He did not fall into decay at all with his image, he was
considered a

great film star and this is logical because the news at that
time did not come as rapidly as

now. On the other hand, in Palma films of Errol
Flynn had only been very recently released,

do not forget that in the Spanish
Civil War in Spain we did not see American films until after

1941 because there
was no money to pay for American films, so I have seen just lately the

movies
of Errol Flynn and so the Mallorcans when he was on the cusp of his fame.”

The Zaca docked at the yacht club.  Errol
Flynn initially settled in the Hotel Maricel and

then stayed at the Hotel
Bonsol, where he organized meetings with their friends.

MARTÍ XAMENA (owner of the Hotel Bonsol) says: “He stayed in the hotel. My
parents

attended to him very personally and they became good friends.”

ROGER TORO says: “Someone had recommended the Hotel Bonsol and he chose it
because

he was told it was a quiet hotel, where it would go unnoticed without
being disturbed.  He

himself initially
came up with this idea of a quiet place, being in a place where no phone calls

could reach him, but it seems that he found himself with his wish so well
fulfilled that it was

him who wanted to call a reporter.”

Finally Errol Flynn rented a house called Es Moli in one of the new tourist
areas near

Palma,
Illetas.  Errol Flynn from childhood
loved of the sea and he was as happy as if he were

sailing the seven seas.

 

Errol Flynn said: “On board the Zaca Pat cooked and comforted me, I
played with my

daughter Arnella.  From
time to time my friends came on board to eat and have a drink or to

set sail on
a cruise.  I read, I dreamed, trying to
find out who I was, worry that I do not drop

or as badly, or as low as people
thought.”
To hell with Hollywood
and the producers Errol Flynn thought!
Away from the cinema and the company, they have a life of their own and seem to
live outside

history. In Mallorca you could
enjoy the sea and live!

VENTURA SALA says: “My father started working on the yacht in 1956, he was
the helmsman. 

Errol at the time had a
crew of Jamaicans, but when they were here for a couple of months,

they wanted
to return to Jamaica and he
took on a crew of Mallorca, of which one was
my

father.

On
Christmas, he gave gifts to the crew and their families and I gave a kiss to
his daughter

Arnella. I took a photo and Errol approached me and said: Ah!
Small bandito!”

 

TONI
RIERA “EL INDIO” says: “I made friends with one of the crew of
the Zaca and asked

him for work.  He then
asked Errol if we needed a sailor and Errol said: Bring the mate!”

(Toni died several years ago and Ventura
told me that he probably never saw this

documentary on television).

In Palma Errol could pursue his great passions, like all those who admired his
manliness

and heroism, he was fascinated by the spectacle of bullfighting.  Accompanied by his friends

celebrated the
cape while drinking cognac.

The bullring
was a meeting of familiar faces and confirmed the attraction that it was for
the island.

 

The
spell of the island attracted other major stars of film, some of who would be invited
by

Errol Flynn himself as Ava Gardner and Rita Hayworth.

VENTURA SALA says: “Rita Hayworth came to Mallorca
and went to the Hotel Maricel,

and asked at the reception to place a call to
Errol Flynn. They called his room and he was

told that Rita Hayworth has
arrived and wanted to talk to him.  Errol
replied: I said I'm not

seeing anyone!  And that day he did not.”

The islanders live on a basis “Live and let live”, we did not ask questions,
but the presence

of a star charisma of Errol Flynn aroused the curiosity of all
people, like when he went to eat a

t the restaurant Sellé Catalá.

 

MIQUEL
MOYÁ said: “Once I had so much trouble that I closed the restaurant and
hid behind

the bar not to be disturbed, but I always did it with love, because
sometimes he drew his head

and say, hey what’s up?”
At night, in the Plaza Gomila, after dinner at the El Patio restaurant, we all
went to the Bar Llous.



PEP
DE LOS RIOS says: “We drank the frozen Daiquiri drinks, with crushed ice,
we had a

shaker with crushed ice for the champagne but we drank the Daiquiris
without sugar, which is

something undrinkable.”

Errol Flynn was captivated by the seascapes, views of the forest of masts
swaying in the

nautical club.  The
biggest joy was lost at sea and sailors remember the songs their grandmothers

sang during their childhood.  He
sometimes came to a cove paradise in Ibiza.



RIERA
TONI says: “We went there with Bonet, a famous diver, to find amphoras,
but could not

find anything because Bonet was a good friend of mine and instead
of looking amphoras, were

going to catch fish and then sell them in
hotels.”

 

The
world of Errol Flynn had nothing to do with the customs of the island. Although
he was

struck by these people that cling to old traditions and carry the burden
of dogma.

PERE SERRA says: “I think he was looking for peace, to live in peace and
escape his fame,

however, I think that really Errol Flynn was never the least
integrated with the life of Palma.

ERROL Flynn said in his memoirs: “I walk into a whorehouse with the same
interest as he

entered the British Museum or the Metropolitan in New York. What drives me is the same

spirit
of curiosity, there are the works of man, there is the art of man, there is the
eternal

pursuit of gold and pleasure.”

 

Errol
Flynn was distinguished by his simple and friendly nature. For him, life was a
fun game,

without prejudice.



TONI
RIERA says: “American gentlemen came to sign a contract, and when I told
him I said

there are some men who want to see you. And Errol said: Tell them
I'm talking to another man.

And he was talking to the dump.”


MIQUEL MOYA says: “In my restaurant there were two women at a table, and
Errol was sitting at

another table. Errol listened to what the women were saying, that he
was the most handsome man

in the movies. Errol did not like this review and
rose from the table, approached the women and said, ugly! ”

 

ROGER
TORO says: “People said he drank too much, and it was true, but he knew
drinking

because he was a gentleman, before and after several toasts.”



JOSEP
PLANAS says: “At a dinner to which he invited his friends over at three in
the

morning with everyone in the water. The only thing that escaped into the
water was me, and

for very little.”

ERROL Flynn says in his memoirs: “I did follow depression, drank, sailed,
I plunged into the sea.

When the Zaca
was docked in Mallorca, I bet with my friend
Manuel Cervantes to throw me

from the crosshairs of my ship. It was the kind of
bet that was done if he had not drunk a drop

of alcohol, but he did and since
the Zaca mast was over a hundred feet high, just devastating.”

MARTI XAMENA says: “He played with us like a kid, because he knew
fencing.  He was a

lovely person I can
not believe he spent so much time to play with some of the children.”
There were famous parties on the Zaca, which ended with the housing of the
yacht being

filled with bottles and sometimes a fight starring Errol Flynn
himself.

 

VENTURA
SALA says: “It was a powerful experience for me, because I saw the movie
Robin

Hood, the Charge of the Light Brigade, and then saw that person on his
boat.  I was going on

board during the
summer, it was a sailors tasks and I had no school so I spent much time on

the
boat and lived the experience as a child who was on a pirate ship, as in his
films.

As young and not so young dreamed of emulating his feats with their audacity
even film after

film, reality showed a man in decline.   His severe drinking problem accumulated and
showed

unfortunate consequences.

Since
then, the relationship of Errol Flynn and Patricia was very poor. Rumors of
infidelity that

raised suspicions aroused the demon of jealousy, caused the
estrangement.”

 

DE
LOS RIOS PEP says, “Errol Flynn I never saw him fall, he staggered a bit,
but I never saw

him ever to fall.”

 

Errol
says in his memoirs: “My biggest addiction is not the drink or drugs, or
sex, is curiosity,

is what has gotten me into all my problems, successes and
failures, I feel drawn towards the

light, toward the darkness, to the
brilliance, stupidity, the monstrosity,…”

RIERA TONI says: “He was not jealous, how could he be jealous if he always
had women.

The woman was jealous of him. “

Errol continued to decline and Patricia was consolidated as a singer, and even
made some

performances in the main theater of Palma.

Errol says: “If I had a Spanish ink pen I feel ready to
write my memoirs, but an

interruption, mental and moral block in my marriage to
Pat probably castrates anything of value.

The record of any marriage with few
exceptions, could only lead to recriminations tedious and

full of resentment.

 

It
is said that an alleged romance between Patricia and a famous Spanish dancer,
caused the

final break..

After his return
to America, he took refuge
in his house in Jamaica and
did not return to Mallorca.

ROGER TORO says: “He also said, and this … is it?   Where am I going with this?

And I said,
because of it, you are well known, you are admired, you are wanted. 

Errol said: Yes, I am wanted because I'm
famous because I had success. But I do
not

want to know the people I know who have been high and when they have given
you

the downturn, no one remembers you.”

Errol Flynn says: “I felt like a guy who had passed into
history and has

professionally reached the end. The gloom came over me.”

 

In
October 1959, he negotiated to sell the Zaca, he suffered a heart attack and he
was brought to

a hospital in Vancouver.
He died on October 14 in Vancouver.

VENTURA SALA says, “He represented another era, at a time when even living
things in

Mallorca were at a slower base but
more intense.”

RIERA TONI says: “He was a sea of good; anyone would have been delighted
to be with him.

XAMENA MARTI says: “It was the most humble man that a person can
imagine.”

MIQUEL Moya said: “A very human and very correct.”

JOSEP PLANAS says: “I hurt my shoulder because every time I looked at him and
said

“Friend”, he hit me on the shoulder.”

ROGER TORO says: “He was a great conqueror and he was a heavy drinker, but
he was a

great man, he was a gentleman in all respects.”

 

Errol
Flynn says in his memoirs: “If I have something of genius, is genius to see
life.”

Today, little remains of the presence of Errol Flynn on the island. The Hotel
Bonsol, survives

among a vast web of concrete. The Patio Restaurant remains
with the doors closed, waiting

for that someday return the old days of glamour.
Llous bar was once and today not even the

name exists.  And the Plaza Gomila, ceased to be one of the
busiest places on this side of the

Mediterranean. The Yacht Club, is awaiting the arrival of sailboats of legendary and intrepid
travelers.
Last, only a detail of the Villa Es Moli exists, a gargoyle that evokes the
figurehead of a pirate

ship and a hidden plate commemorating the passing of
Errol Flynn on the island.
No one fulfilled his wish that his ashes be thrown into the sea, they buried him
in Hollywood.

 

At
the funeral, a friend recited a poem of her beloved Robert Louis Stevenson:

Under
the wide and starry sky    

Dig
the grave and let me lie: 

Glad
did I live and gladly die,    

And
I laid me down with a will.

 

This
be the verse you 'grave for me:      

Here he lies where he long'd to be; 

Home is the sailor, home from the sea, 
  

And the hunter home from the hill.


But if I fall so Errol said, I want to make a request, that you put this verse
on my tombstone:
“Here he lies where he long’d to be, returned has the sailor
from the sea, back from the hill
is the hunter.”



— Tina

 
 

Flynn Comic Books

27 Mar

image

 

I recently discovered a series of comic books and thought you might be interested. (It was not my own find, but a gallant gentleman from Austria gave me the hint.)

<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = “urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office” /> 

It is a series of four comic albums called “Flynn” by Dick Matena, a Dutch comic artist. Originally, six volumes were planned, but only four were realised.

 

The hero of this series is called Earl Flynn. Although the stories as such are purely ficticious, Earl is clearly based upon Errol. He works as an actor in Hollywood, but is terribly bored with his job and seeks adventure whenever possible. He is quite a womaniser, constantly fighting with his producer Sam Goldfish, and you can find many allusions to Hollywood and to Errol’s life and character.

 

image

 

Volume I, titled “Der weiße Tod” (The white death), takes us to Hollywood where a pirate film is shot with Flynn’s double, while Flynn himself is enjoying the company of a young woman. When he is leaving the stuido, he is attacked by a man who accuses Flynn of being responsible for the suicide of his wife. Flynn then decides to leave Hollywood as fast as possible and goes yachting to the coast of Africa. When he leaves the boat to go searching for fresh water, he is captured by a group of native“leopard men” who take him to their village. There, he meets a young white woman who is taken as a hostage, and the adventure begins…

 

image

 

Volume II, titled “Gelbfieber” (Yellow fever), finds Flynn with his Chinese friend Wang training for Flynn’s stunts in his upcoming film (however, Sam Goldfish would refuse Flynn doing his own stunts…). He takes Wang’s sister along to the studio to show her what it is like, but all of a sudden, Wang is being attacked on his boat in the harbour and his sister is kidnapped in the studio by a group of Chinese who want the sister for their boss, a brothel owner named “Mandarin”. Flynn, of course, is going to help her…

 

image

 

Volume III, titled “Der schwarze Engel” (The black angel), takes daring Flynn on an adventurous chase after the murderer of his stunt buddy.

 

image

 

Volume IV, titled “Der dunkelblaue Tod” (The dark blue death),  confronts Flynn with aliens in the Amazonas jungle. There is also a director named Michael Cortez…

 

So as you can see, the stories are quite adventurous, and I think Errol might have liked experiencing them. Even though the drawings show not such a resemblance as those in “Captain Flynn”, it is an enjoyable read. I found a site where you could download one of the albums, but after our recent experiences I ask you to be careful, I did not verify the site: http://www.filestube.com/d/der+schwarze+engel

 

— Inga

 

Meant to do this last month…

21 Mar

It was on a Sunday in February 2007 that the first post to this blog was put up. I thought it might be fun to repost it in February on the same date but got hung up, and missed the date and forgot all about it. I just remembered:

Published: Sun 04 Feb 2007 03:41 PM PS

Remembering Errol…
Excerpt:     None
Body:   

Who was Errol Flynn?

He it was who fought the evil-doers up there on the big screen when I was a kid growing up along the banks of the Snohomish River circa 1959.

I was ten years old when the great swashbuckler died, and clearly remember the day he died because I distinctly recall saying aloud… Oh, I liked him! when I saw his picture in my father’s newspaper and read that he had died in Vancouver, B.C. the day before. Vancouver was in British Columbia, Canada–less than two hours drive north from where we lived in a little logging community that surrounded a tiny lumber mill resting on the edge of the Snohomish River, near Everett, Washington. Not far to the south was the big city of Seattle–farther south, somewhere, was Hollywood where Flynn lived, I thought then…

All Movie Stars lived in Hollywood, I thought.

Where else would they live?

As a ten year old kid, my friends and I would play Robin Hood in the marsh between our houses. This area was about an acre of tall grass with a layer of mud and water under it. In the center of it was a tall tree with willowy branches. Nearby this tree was a cement block that was part of the foundation of a house or building long vanished from sight.

This cement block was a perfect place to swing on a rope from the tree, and land Flynn-like on the cement block, saying loudly “…Welcome to Sherwood, Milady!” as the other kids stood watching.

We created bows and arrows from tree branches (long bows) and shot at cardboard targets in a Tournament–and went about robbing the rich to give to the poor…

There were terrific battles between the Normans and the Saxons–in cardboard armor. We had long stick swords with handles that consisted of a short block of wood nailed across the end of the stick where are hands took up these sharply pointed “swords”. It is amazing that nobody lost an eye or was impaled when we whacked each other's cardboard armor to pieces but we all survived major injury.

It was disconcerting, however, to see the pointed end of a stick come tearing through your head armor (a small cardboard box with eye slits cut in it) and see the sharp tip whiz past your face… We were the Merry Men of Sherwood until dark and our Mothers called out our names to come home for dinner.

The day I read of Errol Flynn's death in my Dad's evening newspaper was a sad one for me and for the Men of Sherwood. But soon, I forgot all about him–and moved on to other childhood adventures. We built a two-by-four wide bridge across the swamp from the cement block to the edge of the sawdust pile–a distance of about a half block, for example. It was rickety, held up by posts driven into the soft swamp ground. We
scavenged everything we needed from the sawmill nearby. It had tons of discarded stuff to use for our scientific and engineering feats.

The days moved by quickly during those hot summer days of 1959–we climbed the Willow tree, and jumped off–catching branches to break our fall into the swamp's knee high muck. We sent expeditions into the surrounding swamp of green scrub, sticker bushes, and  thick-limbed trees to bring back scientific samples of flora and fauna. This was Stink Weed and Dandelions, and all manner of growing weeds. We boiled this up in

Terry Sullivan's mother's pressure cooker in their kitchen and went out to play on the rooftop of the Sullivan's garage. When we heard the explosion, it was nearly dark and Terry's parents weren't home, yet…

The mess was all over the kitchen walls, and their kitchen stank for a week. We got a real hiding for that one!

Other days were spent riding our bicycles round the two roads that came down into the Mill area–my brother never could stop that heavy framed bike with its oversized tires, so he just crashed into the grass or alongside Dad's car–or time was spent making tree houses. We had crew cuts in summer, collected bubble gum cards and seven up bottle caps (to go to the movies when you turned them in) and wore blue jeans all the time with a t-shirt. You could put a playing card held with a wooden clothesline clip onto the wheel of your bike to make it sound like a motorcycle as the card fanned against the spokes!

TV was a little black-and-white set with an arial on the roof of the house. There may have been seven channels including the Canadian channels. Sundays, it seems to me, there were sci-fi movies like the BLOB with Steve McQueen in a starring role. And there were Errol Flynn movies like Robin Hood, The Charge of the Light Brigade, and Dodge City. Red Skeleton was on, and Milton Berle…

I remember seeing Errol on The Red Skeleton Show. He played a bum and held up the remains of his yacht–a porthole!

Errol had a huge effect on young boys of my generation. He was the swashbuckling hero we all wanted to be! He sailed the Seas, he found Adventure and Treasure, and love–that part we could do without. He was always kissing GIRLS!

But he sure could swordfight! He could shoot arrow-after-arrow like you'd pull the trigger on a gun! And every one found its mark!

As the years passed I forgot about Errol Flynn.

I was in my twenties before he became interesting to me again. I had been reading some biographies of various people–adventurous people like Jack London, Frank Buck, Robb White, and Martin & Osa Johnson. Hemingway fascinated me. It was while reading about Hemingway that Errol's name came up. Errol Flynn! There was a reference to something Flynn said in a book called “My Wicked, Wicked Ways”. I wonder if I could find that
book anywhere, I thought.

It turned out that it was still very much in print and there was a paperback copy of it at my local bookstore. Then began some of best reading

I have ever come across in an autobiography. This story had it all… intrigue, mystery, adventure, laughs, tears… and it was all true!

Wasn't it?

Well… What wasn't true made a hellova story, and what was true was not always just a colorful story. You might read “My Wicked, Wicked Ways” as  a terrific novel–or a tall tale, yet, here is a legendary character that captures the spirit of adventure in the hearts of all young people who share the feelings of a young man who takes on more than he can chew at times but has his fill nonetheless of what life has to offer… he drank his fill both literally and figuratively of everything most others only dreamed of or read about in glossy magazines. He was kind, cruel–generous, mean, unpredictable, tormented, creative, foolish, brave, gullible, and had a genious for living larger than life. He
was intelligent, self-educated–a businessman, an internationally recognized actor, a writer, an explorer, a raconteur, a drunk, an addict. His life was a Shakespearean drama…

He was a lot of things to many people and he was less to himself than should have been. He was and is the quintessential bad boy–but he wasn't nearly as wicked as he was thought to be by those who didn't understand him, or those who envied him. He was dangerous. He was cultured, he was a joker, he was… curious.

He was a scientist, of sorts… that is, he knew the real world and wanted to understand it.

To experience it. All of it.

And for nearly fifty years, he did.
____________________________________

On that Sunday, February 4, 2007 we had 1 article.

Today’s blog has:

1250       Articles
2980       Comments

20       Photo Albums
443       Photos

Not bad…

— David DeWitt

 
8 Comments

Posted in Main Page

 

Pirate Latitudes

05 Mar

Well, I just finished reading Michael Crichton's Pirate Latitudes.  My husband, who I thought wasn't paying attention to my fascination with Errol Flynn read the book first.  He said “You and your blog friends need to read this–it was written for Errol Flynn.”  So when my turn came it took me about two weeks to finish 312 pages reading off and on.  If I had my choice I would have just sat and read cover to cover as it was so enjoyable.  It takes place in Port Royal and we are first introduced to Sir James the Governor.  Immediately, I find myself thinking Captain Blood.  When Captain Hunter is introduced he becomes Peter Blood.  I wonder if Michael Crichton was a fan of Errol Flynn and did he watch Sea Hawk and Captain Blood and create this story.  I read on.  There is a female pirate, Lazue, and I picture Halle Berry for some reason in my mind.  I can't quite decide if Olivia could play Lady Almont (niece of the Governor).  Basil of course would be Sanson the Frenchman.  There are several bad guys our hero takes out and twists and turns and two other possible love interests besides Lady Almont.  I think someone should merge Errol into a present day movie as the lead as he would blend in fabulously with Johnny Depp (Jack Sparrow) and Orlando.  (Sam, perhaps this is a part for Orlando!!)  Has anyone read this book?  If so, please comment.  If not, give it a try.  I think you will be pleasantly surprised.

— Kathleen

 
8 Comments

Posted in Main Page

 

Errol Flynn & Orlando Bloom

13 Feb

Not sure if any of you lot have seen some of the behind the scenes shots of Orlando Bloom in the upcoming movie 'The Three Musketeers'  …..is it just me or is he looking very Errol Flynnish? (picture attatched)

So he's done the archery like Flynn in LOTR, He's been a Pirate like Flynn, now he's looking like Lord Essex …like Flynn.      Also found out the Orlando Bloom is now a father and his son is called Flynn! 

— Sam

 
 

Errol Flynn-inspired cartoon characters

29 Nov

Hi fellow Flynnians!

Aside from being a Flynn fan, I'm also a big Disney fan (and a fan of animation in general). Yesterday I saw Disney's new (50th) animated film “Tangled”. It's a really great retelling/re-imagining of the fairytale of Rapunzel. Anyway, so what does this have to do with Errol Flynn?

Well…the main hero in the film is a guy named Flynn Rider (actual first name Eugene — note the first initial “E”). The Disney filmmakers named him after Errol, and partially modeled his character on Errol and his swashbuckling hero persona. Here's a brief description of Flynn Rider, taken from a promotional magazine for “Tangled”: “The rogue bandit Flynn Rider is daring, and has always relied on his wit, charm and good looks to get out of even the stickiest of situations.”

Also, here's a quote about the character from one reviewer of the movie: “He's named Flynn by the way, and may remind parents, or grandparents, of a similar hero, circa 1937's 'The Prince and the Pauper'.”

And, to top it off, in the film Flynn Rider tells Rapunzel that he took his name from a legendary swashbuckler by the name of Flynnigan Rider — a man who was daring, heroic, good with the ladies, rich, and could do anything and go anywhere in the world. Sound familiar? :-)

So, this is the 2nd time (if you count their animated version of Robin Hood) that Disney has created an Errol Flynn-inspired animated character. I also know of 3 other Errol-inspired animated characters: The heroic archer-poet called Bow and the hero pirate called Sea Hawk — both from the 1980's animated TV series “She-Ra: Princess of Power”, and the heroic swashbuckling mouse Reepicheep — a computer-animated character in the Disney live-action “Narnia” films.

Anyone else know of any others?

— Rachel