The Poseidon Adventure (1972 film)
The Poseidon Adventure is a 1972 American disaster film directed by Ronald Neame, produced by Irwin Allen, and based on Paul Gallico's 1969 novel of the same name. It features an ensemble cast, including five Oscar winners: Gene Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, Jack Albertson, Shelley Winters, and Red Buttons. The plot centers on the fictional SS Poseidon, an aged luxury liner on her final voyage from New York City to Athens before being sent to the scrapyard. On New Year's Eve, she is overturned by a tsunami. Passengers and crew are trapped inside, and a preacher attempts to lead a small group of survivors to safety.
The Poseidon Adventure | |
---|---|
Theatrical poster by Mort Künstler | |
Directed by | Ronald Neame |
Produced by | Irwin Allen |
Screenplay by | |
Based on | The Poseidon Adventure by Paul Gallico |
Starring | |
Music by | John Williams |
Cinematography | Harold E. Stine |
Edited by | Harold F. Kress |
Production company | Kent Productions, Ltd. |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 117 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $4.7 million[1] |
Box office | $125 million[2] |
It is in the vein of other all-star disaster films of the early-mid 1970s such as Airport (1970), Earthquake (1974), and The Towering Inferno (1974). The film was released in December 1972 and was the highest-grossing film of 1973 and grossed over $125 million worldwide. The film won two Academy Awards,[3] a Golden Globe Award, a British Academy Film Award, and a Motion Picture Sound Editors Award.[4] A sequel, Beyond the Poseidon Adventure, also based on a novel by Gallico, was released in 1979.
Plot
The SS Poseidon, an ocean liner slated for retirement, travels to Athens. Despite safety concerns from the captain, the new owner's representative insists he go full speed to save money, preventing Poseidon from taking on ballast.
Reverend Scott, a minister who believes "God helps those who help themselves", is traveling to a new parish in Africa as punishment for his unorthodox views. Detective Lieutenant Rogo and wife Linda, a former prostitute, deal with her seasickness. Susan Shelby and her younger brother Robin are traveling to meet their parents. Susan has a crush on Scott while Robin is interested in how the ship works and frequently visits the engine room. Retired Jewish store owner Manny Rosen and wife, Belle, are going to Israel to meet their 2-year-old grandson for the first time. Haberdasher James Martin is a love-shy, health-conscious bachelor. The ship's singer, Nonnie Parry, rehearses for the New Year's Day celebration.
Passengers gather in the promenade room to celebrate. The captain is called to the bridge in response to a report of an undersea earthquake. He receives word from the lookout that a tsunami is approaching from the direction of Crete. He issues a mayday distress signal. The ship is hit broadside and capsizes, floating upside-down.
In the dining room, survivors take stock of their predicament. Acres, an injured waiter, is trapped at the galley door now high above. At Martin's prompting, Scott determines that the escape route will be found "upwards", at the outer hull, now above water. Robin tells him the hull near the propeller shaft is only 1 inch (3 cm) thick. Scott attempts to convince the dozens of survivors in the dining room to travel with him to the ship's hull. However, the ship's purser tells them to wait for help. Most of the survivors side with the purser. The Rosens, the Rogos, Susan, Robin, Acres, Nonnie, and Martin agree to go with Scott, using a Christmas tree as a ladder. After the group climbs to the galley, there is a series of explosions. As seawater floods the dining room, those remaining attempt to climb the tree, but their weight causes it to fall. Water fills up the room and Poseidon begins sinking.
Scott leads his group toward the engine room. While climbing a ladder inside a ventilation shaft, the ship rocks from more explosions. Acres falls and dies when the shaft explodes. Leaving the shaft, the group meets a large band of survivors led by the ship's doctor, heading toward the bow. Scott believes they are heading for their doom, but Rogo wants to follow them and gives Scott 15 minutes to find the engine room. Although he takes longer than allowed, Scott succeeds.
The engine room is on the other side of a flooded corridor. Belle reveals she is a former competitive swimmer and volunteers to go through, but Scott refuses her and dives in. Halfway through, a panel collapses on him. The survivors notice the delay, and Belle dives in. She frees Scott and they make it to the other side, but Belle suffers a heart attack. Before dying, she tells Scott to give her Chai pendant to her husband, to give to their grandson. Rogo swims over to make sure Belle and Scott are all right, then leads the rest over. When Rosen finds Belle's body, he is unwilling to go on, but Scott gives him her pendant, reminding him that he has a reason to live.
Scott leads the survivors to the propeller shaft room's watertight door, but additional explosions cause Linda to lose her grip and fall to her death. A heartbroken and infuriated Rogo blames Scott. A ruptured pipe releases steam, blocking their escape. Scott rants at God for the survivors' deaths as he leaps across a pool of flaming oil, grabbing onto the burning-hot valve wheel to shut down the steam. Scott tells Rogo to lead the group on before falling to his death.
Rogo leads the remaining survivors—Rosen, Martin, Nonnie, Susan, and Robin—through the watertight doors and into the propeller shaft tunnel. They hear a noise from outside and bang on the hull to attract attention. The rescuers cut through the hull, assist the six survivors from the ship, inform them that no one else survived, and fly them to safety.
Cast
- Gene Hackman as Reverend Frank Scott
- Ernest Borgnine as Detective Lieutenant Mike Rogo
- Red Buttons as James Martin
- Carol Lynley as Nonnie Parry
- Roddy McDowall as Acres
- Stella Stevens as Linda Rogo
- Shelley Winters as Belle Rosen
- Jack Albertson as Manny Rosen
- Pamela Sue Martin as Susan Shelby
- Arthur O'Connell as Chaplain John
- Eric Shea as Robin Shelby
- Leslie Nielsen as Captain Harrison
- Fred Sadoff as Linarcos
- Byron Webster as Purser
- Jan Arvan as Dr. Caravello
- Sheila Mathews as Nurse
- John Crawford as Chief Engineer
- Bob Hastings as M.C.
- Erik Nelson as Tinkham
Production
The novel was acquired by Avco Embassy in 1969 and Allen's Kent Productions signed a deal with them to make three movies, including The Poseidon Adventure. Avco Embassy cancelled the production and it moved to 20th Century Fox who contributed half of the budget.[5][6] Steve Broidy and Sherrill Corwin helped finance the rest.[5]
Parts of the movie were filmed aboard the RMS Queen Mary.[5]
Music
The score for the film was composed and conducted by John Williams. The song "The Morning After", written by Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn, won the 1972 Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 45th Academy Awards in March 1973. It was performed in the film by Renée Armand, dubbing for Carol Lynley. A version of "The Morning After" performed by Maureen McGovern became a hit single in 1973.
There was no soundtrack album at the time of the film's release. The score was first released as a CD by Film Score Monthly in July 1998.[7] A remastered version was released by La-La Land Records on April 20, 2010.[8] La-La Land Records released a second, newly remastered edition of Williams' score on December 3, 2019 as part of a boxset also including Williams' scores for Earthquake and The Towering Inferno.
Release
The Poseidon Adventure opened Tuesday, December 12, 1972, as the first film at the newly opened National Theatre in Times Square in New York City.[5][9]
Reception
Critical reception
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 80% of 25 critics gave the film a positive review, and the average score is 6.94/10. The critical consensus reads: "The Poseidon Adventure exemplifies the disaster film done right, going down smoothly with ratcheting tension and a terrific ensemble to give the peril a distressingly human dimension."[12] Metacritic gave the film a score of 70 based on 10 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[13]
Roger Ebert gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and called it "the kind of movie you know is going to be awful, and yet somehow you gotta see it, right?"[14] A. H. Weiler of The New York Times wrote that "though tensions slacken and credibility is strained here, realistic technical effects make the stricken ship and the efforts of its survivors to escape a fairly spellbinding adventure."[15] Variety called the film "a highly imaginative and lustily-produced meller" with "some of the most exciting sequences seen in years."[16] Gene Siskel gave the film three stars out of four and wrote that "the film's technical excellence—special effects, production design, and the stars doing their own stunts—holds one's interest."[17] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times wrote that "the special effects—the genuinely remarkable production values and technical wizardries—sweep everything else aside. Are the characters as gaudy and thin as cereal boxes? Is the dialog banal and shrill? Is the moralizing heavy-handed and relentless? Is the hokum a bit thick even in the context of a showmanship special? Well, yes. But who cares?"[18] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote that the film was "strictly formula hokum, but reasonably diverting if one doesn't ask for more than the filmmakers care to give—that is, for imaginative writing and direction. As usual, only the special effects and set designers and the stunt men have been permitted to be playful and creative."[19]
Box office
The film expanded to 205 engagements by Christmas Day with a gross to that date of $2,604,168 in the United States which made it the number one film at the US box office.[20][21] It remained at number one through the New Year period but was displaced by The Getaway for one week before returning to number one for 8 consecutive weeks. It spent another two weeks at number one for a total of 12 weeks atop the box office. The film went on to earn theatrical rentals of $40 million in the United States and Canada in 1973 being the highest-grossing film of the year.[22] The film was reissued in June 1974 and was number one at the US box office in its first week.[23] The film earned rentals of $75 million worldwide,[6] from a worldwide gross of over $125 million.[2]
TV premiere
When the film made its network television premiere on ABC on October 27, 1974, it earned a Nielsen rating of 39.0 and an audience share of 62%, making it the sixth highest rated film to ever air on network television.[24][25]
Awards
The film won a Special Achievement Academy Award for Visual Effects and an Academy Award for Best Original Song (for "The Song from The Poseidon Adventure", also known as "The Morning After"). Shelley Winters won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role. It also received nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama and for Best Original Score by John Williams.[26]
Legacy
The Poseidon Adventure has become a cult film.[27] It is in the vein of other all-star disaster films of the 1970s such as Airport and later ones like Earthquake (1974) and The Towering Inferno (1974). It is listed in Golden Raspberry Award founder John Wilson's book, The Official Razzie Movie Guide, as one of The 100 Most Enjoyably Bad Movies Ever Made.[28]
Mad's September 1973 edition satirized the movie as "The Poopsidedown Adventure". Its cover was the first Mad Magazine not to show Alfred E. Neuman's face. Instead he is shown floating upside down with only his feet in sight jutting out from an SS Poseidon life perserver. Likewise it "exposed" stereotypical cliches of the survivors and had Robin Shelley running for his life by Mike Rogo after the boy remembers that if the ship ever turned over you'd only have to wait 2 hours before it turned itself right back up again!It became the best selling issue in the magazine's history.[29]
Sequel, homage and remakes
A 1979 sequel, Beyond the Poseidon Adventure, which was also based on a novel by Gallico, was released later with an equally star-studded cast.
In 1998, several episodes of the daytime soap Sunset Beach titled "Shockwave" revolved around an earthquake and tsunami in California and major parts of the episodes take place on a cruise ship, the S.S. Neptune that is capsized by the giant wave. The episode borrowed heavily from the plot line of The Poseidon Adventure and garnered huge audiences and spurring NBC to repeat it several weeks later in prime time.
The Poseidon Adventure has been remade twice, first as a television special in 2005 with the same name and as a theatrical release titled Poseidon in 2006.
The 2007 Christmas episode of Doctor Who, titled Voyage of the Damned, features a group of survivors trying to escape the luxury starship Titanic, which has collided with an asteroid. [30]
See also
- List of American films of 1972
- The Last Voyage (1960)
- Survival film, about the film genre, with a list of related films
References
- Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1. p256
- "Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (advertisement)". Variety. 6 September 1978. pp. 7–10.
- "The 45th Academy Awards (1973) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 2011-08-28.
- "NY Times: The Poseidon Adventure". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-12-28.
- The Poseidon Adventure at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Solomon, Aubrey (2002), Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History, Scarecrow Filmmakers Series, 20, Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, p. 173, ISBN 9780810842441
- "Film Score Monthly CD: Poseidon Adventure/ The Paper Chase, The". www.filmscoremonthly.com.
- "Irwin Allen Blog » Blog Archive » The Poseidon Adventure (Stereo): Limited Edition". irwinallenblog.com.
- "Gotham Waits For New Product; '1776' Huge $320,000, 'Valachi' 58G, 'Sounder' $23,885, 'Sleuth' $10,315". Variety. December 13, 1972. p. 8.
- Maltin, Leonard (2014). Leonard Maltin's 2015 Movie Guide. New York: Plume. p. 1114. ISBN 978-0-14-218176-8.
- Bracke, Peter (June 4, 2008). "The Poseidon Adventure". High-Def Digest. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
- The Poseidon Adventure at Rotten Tomatoes
- "The Poseidon Adventure Reviews". Metacritic.
- Ebert, Roger (December 21, 1972). "The Poseidon Adventure". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 2018-12-17.
- Weiler, A. H. (December 13, 1972). "Screen: 'Poseidon Adventure' Arrives". The New York Times. 61.
- "Film Reviews: The Poseidon Adventure". Variety. December 13, 1972. 15.
- Siskel, Gene (December 22, 1972). "Escapism is in season over on State Street". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 1.
- Champlin, Charles (December 14, 1972). "Survival Struggle on the Poseidon". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 1.
- Arnold, Gary (December 27, 1972). "'Poseidon Adventure' Diverting". The Washington Post. B1.
- "50 Top-Grossing Films". Variety. January 10, 1973. p. 9.
- "The Biggest Grossing Picture In America Is Irwin Allen's Production of "The Poseidon Adventure"". Variety. January 27, 1972. pp. 8–9.
- "Big Rental Films of 1973". Variety. 9 January 1974. p. 19.
- "50 Top-Grossing Films". Variety. June 19, 1974. p. 9.
- "Hit Movies on U.S. TV Since 1961". Variety. January 24, 1990. p. 160.
- The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 805. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
- "Poseidon Adventure, The". www.goldenglobes.com. Retrieved 2021-02-01.
- Vinciguerra, Thomas (2006-05-07). "Underwater, and Over the Top in 1972". The New York Times.
- Wilson, John (2005). The Official Razzie Movie Guide: Enjoying the Best of Hollywood's Worst. Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 0-446-69334-0.
- Archived 2016-08-05 at the Wayback Machine
- https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1061123/
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Poseidon Adventure |