-
Portsmouth, December 1787.
-
I looked upon the vessel that was to take
me to the island of Tahiti...
-
...a destination so far from England...
-
...that one couldn't go farther
without starting to come home.
-
And the length of the journey was equaled
by the importance of its mission.
-
What could be more vital...
-
...than to find and cultivate a nourishing
new food that cost nothing to grow?
-
A blessing for the poor,
the hungry of the world.
-
It was a mission close to my heart.
-
And it was I who had been chosen
from amongst all the gardeners in England.
-
Beg pardon, can you tell me
if this boat is the Bounty?
-
- Boat, did you say?
- Yes.
-
- A "boat." It's a ship, you landlubber.
- What kind of a seaman's this?
-
- He's a peddler.
- You selling something, chum?
-
I'm not a peddler, I'm a gardener.
-
Assistant botanist at the Royal
Botanical Gardens at Kew.
-
- You know Kew Gardens, of course.
- Kew's outside London. You lost your way.
-
Well, I haven't lost my way if this boat...
If this ship is the Bounty.
-
Aye, it's the Bounty, all right.
-
Perhaps one of you gentlemen
could tell me where I sign on?
-
I wonder what a gardener's doing
onboard, huh?
-
Gonna plant roses in me hammock, are you?
-
- Good thing, too, the way you smell.
- Hold on, hold on. Look, empty pots.
-
We're going to Tahiti to fill
them with something, right?
-
Well, one usually fills
empty pots with something.
-
- What's this, a little telescope?
- Be careful, they're scientific documents.
-
- Agronomy records.
- They're what?
-
Agronomy records.
-
- Sketches, really.
- Sketches?
-
- Sketches of breadfruit.
- Breadfruit?
-
You mean, where we're going,
bread grows on trees?
-
Bread trees. Well, that's daft
enough for a shipload, eh?
-
There's nothing daft about breadfruit.
This is a very real food.
-
- A staple, like wheat. Here.
- Goofy-looking weed.
-
It's funny nobody's ever
heard of this before.
-
No one ever heard of the potato
until Sir Francis Drake brought it.
-
It altered European economy.
Breadfruit may alter it again.
-
I wonder what it tastes like.
-
The West Indies
Company plans to feed it...
-
...to the slaves in Jamaica
no matter the taste.
-
But then, if it becomes popular,
they'll feed it to the world.
-
Gentlemen, we're about to embark
on a very momentous journey.
-
Personally, I'm proud to be part of it.
-
Now, where do I sign on?
-
I'll show you. Come along with me.
-
Breadfruit. Did you ever
hear of that before?
-
Come on, love, you got me
money, what more do you want?
-
Now, come on, get off the ship.
-
- Hey, Scratch, sign on me mate here.
- Make your mark right there.
-
Captain coming aboard.
-
He was master of the Resolution
under Captain Cook.
-
- What's he like?
- A hard one. I sailed under him.
-
Well, he walks like a sailor, anyway.
-
- Mr. Fryer.
- Captain, sir.
-
- How's the crew shaping?
- A prime lot, sir.
-
- And all volunteers.
- Good.
-
I'd like my chest brought
aboard, Mr. Fryer.
-
If you have a sober hand
who can be trusted.
-
At your service, sir.
-
Mills is a good man, sir.
-
Remain by my cabin,
I'll have other errands.
-
Aye, aye, sir. Come on,
give me a hand, mate.
-
You're not late in pushing
yourself forward.
-
You keep your nose where it
belongs and give me a hand.
-
Well, don't be touchy, mate.
Got a long voyage ahead.
-
- That's true. There it is.
- Mm-hm.
-
Always speak up for the easy tasks in port
to be spared the difficult ones at sea.
-
Ah.
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Yah! Yah! Yah!
-
What's this, a royal visit?
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That's Mr. Christian's carriage, sir.
-
Is it, now?
-
So I've had a career fop pawned
onto me as a first mate.
-
- You haven't met him yet, sir?
- He was assigned only yesterday.
-
Moorechild was my choice. He was taken
ill with some malady or other.
-
Nothing compares with a woman washed
all over, smelling like a Frenchman.
-
Fletcher Christian, lieutenant,
come aboard to join, sir.
-
Lieutenant Christian. You
are a naval lieutenant, I presume?
-
Yes, please forgive my appearance.
-
I was staying with friends when my orders
reached me, so I came directly.
-
I see.
-
- This is Mr. Fryer, our sailing master.
- Oh, yes. Nice to see you again, Mr. Fryer.
-
- Same to you.
- Yes, we've sailed together.
-
Let me show your men your cabin.
Your pardon, sir.
-
You've come none too soon.
-
- Please be about your duties without delay.
- Your indulgence, sir:
-
I have two charming friends here
who insist upon seeing me to my ship.
-
And they also insist upon meeting the captain.
They say it's important.
-
- Very well.
- Thank you.
-
Hello, Ned.
-
- Fletcher.
- How are you?
-
- I'd heard you were going to be with us.
- Yes, we'll be together.
-
What luck.
-
- Well, if you'll excuse me...
- Certainly. We'll dine together.
-
Wonderful lad. Mother's a great
friend of the family. Lady Young.
-
Wonderful horsewoman also. Trains
them herself, if you can imagine.
-
I'll try.
-
I'm sorry, madam, I do not speak French.
-
Oh, for shame, captain.
-
That's uncivilized of you.
-
I humbly apologize.
-
May I present, Captain Bligh,
the Lady Gwendolyn Arbast.
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- Milady.
- Delighted to meet you, captain.
-
May I compliment you
upon your distinguished record of command?
-
The compliment's slightly premature, milady.
This is my first captaincy.
-
- The first of many, I'm sure.
- Thank you.
-
Good luck, captain. Come along, Therese.
-
Excuse me, sir.
-
No, don't bother
to come with us, Fletcher.
-
Last-minute attentions
are always hollow...
-
- ...and you are insincere to start with.
- Oh, dear.
-
Well, sir, I understand we're taking this...
This river scow...
-
...halfway around the world
on a grocer's errand.
-
I take a somewhat different view. So
do their lordships of the Admiralty.
-
Do they really? How extraordinary.
-
Tell me, what is a man of your particular
interests doing in the navy?
-
Oh. Process of elimination.
-
There's something dusty about the army,
and affairs of state are rather a bore.
-
You know, one must do something.
-
Here's a fellow trying to catch your eye.
Looks like an embalmer.
-
- Beg pardon, sir, might I have a word?
- Are you our gardener?
-
Yes, sir. Brown, sir.
-
- Good. Found your quarters yet?
- No, sir.
-
Get him a good billet. This
is the most important man aboard.
-
- Aye, aye, sir.
- I am hardly that, but thank you, sir.
-
I have a message for you,
sir, from our chief botanist.
-
- What is it?
- He has reached the conclusion...
-
...that breadfruit has a dormant period.
According to his experiments...
-
...it begins sometime in October.
-
A dormant period?
-
Four or five months when the fruit cannot
be transplanted. The cuttings die.
-
Well, October's some way off.
-
That shouldn't worry us, unless your botanist
is wrong about the date.
-
- Exactly, sir.
- Mr. Christian.
-
Yes, sir.
-
Oh, sir...
-
Does it really matter when these
vegetables arrive in Jamaica?
-
It matters to the tune
of £1000 a day, Mr. Christian.
-
My word, that is an impressive
amount, yes.
-
The West India merchants
are impressed by it.
-
So is the Admiralty, and so am I.
-
It is my intention to land
our cargo in Jamaica...
-
...as far ahead of the Admiralty's timetable
as is humanly possible.
-
Yes. Well, one can understand that.
-
Doing so, one can look forward
to promotions and even honors...
-
...and all that, yes.
-
I will do exactly
all that, Mr. Christian.
-
Which brings me
to the subject of yourself.
-
I will tolerate nothing less than a man's best
efforts, officer or seaman.
-
Highborn connections are no
substitute for hard work.
-
No, indeed, they're not, sir.
-
But, personally, I see no reason why a good
officer cannot be a gentleman as well.
-
Do you disagree, sir?
-
Not if he's first a good officer.
-
It's a debatable point...
-
...but a good subject
for a dinner's conversation.
-
But I'm keeping Mr. Brown waiting...
-
...and I mustn't neglect
the most important man on our ship.
-
Excuse me, sir.
-
Hello, Brown...
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Make ready for sail, Mr. Christian.
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Aye, aye, sir.
-
Hands to stations for leaving harbor.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
All hands to stations for leaving harbor!
-
All hands on deck.
-
All hands to stations
for leaving harbor!
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All right, now, heavy on it.
-
Step around.
-
Let go and hold.
-
Ship ready for sea, sir.
-
Set topsails and headsails.
Starboard tack.
-
Set topsails and headsails.
-
Set topsails and headsails!
-
Larboard braces!
-
- Set topgallant. Sheet home.
- Set topgallant!
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Set royals.
-
Set royals!
-
Midships. Steady as she goes.
-
- Boatswain's mate.
- Aye, sir?
-
Pipe up spirits.
-
Up spirits! Watch below...
-
...muster for grog on the upper deck!
-
Hey, Mills, Mr. Christian wants
a word with you on the quarterdeck.
-
Fact is, I'm a little slow
sometimes, and...
-
Good afternoon, sir. Mack
here is reporting a theft.
-
- What, already?
- Aye, sir.
-
Carry on with your investigations.
-
Seaman Mills at your service, sir. No
labor too long, no job too hard, sir.
-
Well, you're a lighthearted fellow,
as well as a light-fingered one.
-
Sir?
-
Seems that in a moment of exuberance,
you stole two 25-pound cheeses.
-
- I stole two 25-pound cheeses, sir?
- Mm.
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But you wish to deny it.
-
Well, speak up, Mills.
-
Why, yes, I do, sir. Of course.
Certainly, sir.
-
First of all, sir, I'd be grateful
to know who's accusing me.
-
Yes, of course. This
observant chap here...
-
...says he saw you take them
before we left Portsmouth.
-
Well, he saw wrong, sir,
or else he's a bloody liar.
-
Are you a bloody liar?
-
Answer freely.
-
No, sir. I saw him take them
two cheeses with me own eyes.
-
Mr. Christian, testing one man's word
against another's is an empty procedure.
-
List the shortage as unsolved theft...
-
...and stop the men's cheese ration
until the deficit is made up.
-
As you say, sir.
-
- Well, that'll be all, Mills.
- Thank you, sir.
-
Was there something further
you wished to discuss?
-
Early Renaissance sketching, perhaps?
-
No, sir. Sorry, sir.
-
Let it lay, whatever it is. Let it lay.
-
- I got a little score to settle.
- Look, son, this is a small ship.
-
Fill it with grudges and there
be no room left to live in.
-
And you're listening to 30 years at sea.
-
You don't preach to me, McCoy,
and I won't preach to you. All right?
-
It's a good bargain...
-
...with you the loser.
-
You can thank your good
friend Mills for this.
-
Now, this is the way it's gonna
be, captain's orders.
-
There'll be no cheese issue until the shortage
is made up, you understand?
-
And you?
-
So we've got a bootlicker onboard, eh?
-
Hm?
-
A troublemaker.
-
It wasn't my fault.
-
Hey, what's the matter?
-
Don't like to be called
a thief, that's all.
-
- Thief?
- A thief, that's right. A thief.
-
- I'll teach you a lesson. Squealing on the...
- Hey. Hey. Hey!
-
I like a bit of cheese with my grog.
Maybe it's you should take the licking.
-
Now, look here.
-
It was the captain who asked me take
the cheeses to his home as a favor.
-
It's always the same
in this blasted navy.
-
You do a job for an officer
like that, you're called a thief.
-
- And the crew lose their cheeses. SEAMAN
2: You did the captain a favor, eh?
-
It was the captain. The captain
helping himself to the ship's stores.
-
- Hey.
- The captain's the thief, not me.
-
Shh.
-
The Articles of War provide most adequately
for a man who calls his captain a thief.
-
I think a few weeks without grog
will teach him to hold his tongue.
-
And two dozen with the lash
will teach him better still.
-
All hands to witness punishment,
Mr. Christian, if you please.
-
"If any officer, mariner or soldier,
in or belonging to the fleet...
-
...shall behave himself with contempt
to his superior officer...
-
...such superior officer being
in the execution of his office...
-
...he shall be punished according
to the nature of his offense."
-
Two dozen lashes.
-
Ship's company, on hats.
-
You just remember, it ain't
me that's whipping you.
-
Don't worry, I'll live.
-
You know, mate. It ain't me, remember.
-
Stop worrying. You're making me nervous.
-
Lay on, Quintal.
-
[GASPING QUIETLY
-
One.
-
Two.
-
Three.
-
Four.
-
Five.
-
- Six.
- You're going too lightly, Quintal.
-
Lay on with a will or you'll take
his place.
-
Seven.
-
Eight.
-
Nine.
-
Ten.
-
Eleven.
-
- Twelve.
- You were ordered to witness.
-
- You can't turn away.
- Thirteen.
-
Fourteen.
-
Fifteen.
-
Sixteen.
-
Seventeen.
-
Eighteen. Nineteen.
-
Twenty.
-
Twenty-one.
-
Twenty-two.
-
Twenty-three.
-
Twenty-four.
-
Company, dismissed.
-
Lay away lee braces!
-
You are not eating, Mr. Young.
-
With your permission, I'm not hungry.
-
Permission denied. We'll not have food wasted.
Eat your supper.
-
Aye, sir.
-
Not a very sociable group tonight.
-
As a matter of fact, I was about to make
a remark when you spoke.
-
You're pardoned. Something
troubling you, Mr. Christian?
-
No, sir, it's nothing. I just...
-
Well, I don't feel my cheeriest
after watching a man take a severe lashing.
-
Pass Mr. Young the potatoes, please.
-
You've witnessed
punishment before, surely?
-
Go ahead, speak your mind.
-
Well, sir, since you ask, it's...
-
It's the question of degree
that troubles me.
-
You see, if one flogs a man half
to death for a minor infraction...
-
...then how does one punish
him for a serious offense?
-
"Minor infraction," you said?
-
Yes, I think that two cheeses, sir...
-
Plus the word "thief"
applied to his captain.
-
But you still feel that stopping
the man's grog was sufficient punishment.
-
Well, I agree with you.
-
You...? You agree?
-
Eat it up. Excellent stew.
-
If we were concerned
with only the one case, certainly.
-
- Well, I don't... I don't...
- Well, hear me.
-
You will, all of you, no doubt,
command your own ships someday.
-
Suppose your vessel
is running in heavy seas.
-
The shrouds are covered
with ice, a gale is blowing.
-
It becomes necessary, in your opinion,
to order a seaman aloft.
-
He realizes, of course, that if his fingers
slip from the icy shrouds for a split second...
-
...he'll perish immediately.
-
Now, this is a typical seaman:
-
A half-witted, wife-beating,
habitual drunkard.
-
His whole life is spent evading
and defying authority.
-
Tell me, sir, what is it
that makes this man go aloft?
-
Depending on the man, sir,
any number of things.
-
You can put it in one word: fear.
Fear of what you'll do to him.
-
Fear of punishment so vivid in his mind
that he fears it even more than sudden death.
-
Now, don't mistake me...
-
...I'm not advising cruelty
or brutality with no purpose.
-
My point is that cruelty with purpose
is not cruelty. It's efficiency.
-
But a man will never disobey you...
-
...once he's watched
his mate's backbone laid bare.
-
He'll remember those white
ribs staring at him.
-
He'll see the flesh jump...
-
...and hear the whistle of the whip
for the rest of his life.
-
Well, perhaps you're right, sir.
-
I'd be careful of that cheese
if I were you, sir.
-
It has a peculiar smell.
I think it's a bit tainted.
-
Then, of course, it's a question
of individual taste.
-
That's a damn good port.
-
In the following weeks,
Captain Bligh worked the ship...
-
...for every furlong
of gain it could give.
-
Every inch of canvas spread...
-
...and God help the helmsman
if the wake were not arrow-straight.
-
Captain Bligh must've asked me
the same question a score of times:
-
What day saw the beginning
of the breadfruit's dormant period?
-
I told him repeatedly: I could
not name the exact date...
-
...for lack of knowing it.
-
It became clear he'd begun
to worry lest we arrive too late.
-
He studied his charts, hour on hour.
I could not imagine why.
-
I'd been told there was only one way
to get to the other side of the world:
-
The long way, around the Cape of Good
Hope, at the bottom of Africa.
-
That was the course with favoring winds.
-
As for the other route, the westward
passage around the Horn...
-
...while arithmetic said yes
to that, weather said no.
-
May I share your merriment?
-
Just a pleasantry, sir, it was nothing.
-
Mayn't I be included?
-
Well, it was just the way
you were walking, sir.
-
Reminded me of a mutual
friend, Lord Folkestone.
-
- Do continue.
- Well, that's all, sir.
-
What was the resemblance?
-
Well, you just both have
this distinctive walk, sir.
-
Really? In what way distinctive?
-
Well, he was kicked by a horse, sir.
-
I'd... I'd rather not say where, sir...
-
...but it had the effect
of making him walk most oddly.
-
Poor fellow.
-
I see.
-
You may make yourself comfortable
at the masthead, Mr. Young.
-
Please remain there until I summon you.
-
Aye, sir.
-
Don't repeat that mistake, Mr. Christian.
I'm not a figure of fun.
-
Indeed you're not, sir.
-
Make the course south-southwest, please.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Boatswain's mate! Did you
say south-southwest, sir?
-
I did.
-
- Lee braces!
- Lee braces it is, sir!
-
- Down helm.
- Down helm, sir.
-
- Hold her steady, south-southwest.
- South-southwest, sir.
-
- Check away those weather sheets!
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
Going around the Horn will take
five months off our journey.
-
Well, we shall have ourselves
quite a little adventure.
-
What amuses you now?
-
I was just thinking, sir,
that our little errand for groceries...
-
...might wind up in a page
of naval history.
-
If we succeed in negotiating
the Horn in the dead of winter.
-
Why shouldn't we succeed?
Admiral Anson did.
-
Yes, but of course, he didn't choose
to attempt it in a 91 -foot chamber pot.
-
In any event, his was the only ship to do it,
and I believe he lost 50 percent of his crew.
-
You might point that out to the crew.
It should improve their performance.
-
Remember, fear is our best weapon.
Good night, sir.
-
When shall I recall Mr. Young, sir?
-
When I come on deck in the morning.
-
I want to see how comically
he walks, poor fellow.
-
But perhaps in the morning, sir,
he won't be able to walk at all.
-
Perhaps.
-
Good night, sir.
-
Good fellow.
-
Begging your pardon, sir,
are we really making for the Horn?
-
Yes, evidently.
-
May heaven protect us.
I was in Admiral Anson's ship, sir.
-
Were you really? Did you
find it interesting?
-
Interesting, sir? It was like riding
a cork over a waterfall, sir.
-
And "wind" is not the name
for what blows in your face.
-
It's something made of iron.
-
Swings at you from the west, never
changing, day in and day out.
-
With seas as high as the mainmast.
-
We had lifelines rigged
everywhere, sir...
-
...and there were still
16 men washed overboard.
-
Cold?
-
Three men froze in the yards.
Frozen stiff, sir.
-
Couldn't get them down without cutting
their fingers loose from the shrouds.
-
I was lucky.
-
But that's the Horn for you, sir.
-
A delightful passage.
-
Good morning, sir.
-
And good morning to you, Ned.
Did you sleep well?
-
- My... My hands. I can't move them at all.
- Steady.
-
- Easy, Ned.
- But there's no feeling in them, Fletcher.
-
- Easy, Ned. Easy, Ned.
- None at all. Can't you understand?
-
- Absolute...
- Easy. Don't be undignified.
-
Yes, of course, I... I'm sorry.
-
Come along.
-
- I don't think I can walk very well, Fletcher.
- Well, don't be self-conscious.
-
We shall probably all walk like Lord Folkestone
before this voyage is over.
-
There you are.
-
Very good, Ned. Very good.
-
She's straining badly, sir.
-
Yes, I'll have the topgallants
off her, Mr. Morrison.
-
Watch on deck! Topgallants fore line!
-
Boatswain's mate, call all hands.
-
All hands on deck!
-
Step lively there. Come on. Jump to it.
-
Come on, let's get on with it.
-
We don't wanna be here
if this stick breaks.
-
- I think that's better, sir.
- I agree, Mr. Morrison.
-
Afraid of a little weather, Mr. Christian?
Set the topgallants again.
-
But you see, sir, the masts
are straining, sir.
-
- You arguing with me?
- By no means, sir.
-
I was simply answering your question.
-
- Mr. Morrison, set the topgallants again.
- Aye, sir.
-
All right, you men. Up aloft
and set the topgallants again.
-
Any excuse to retard
our progress, eh, Mr. Christian?
-
But you wrong me, sir, if you believe
that I would willfully obstruct our progress.
-
Come, now, why don't you admit you
wouldn't lift a finger to speed it?
-
But that's absurd, sir. Why
should I not wish to do my best?
-
Because you are the sort of self-styled
gentleman who thinks only one thought.
-
You feel only one emotion: contempt.
-
Contempt for effort, for ambition...
-
...for anyone born less
fortunate than yourself.
-
You are poisoned with contempt,
Mr. Christian...
-
...and it makes you useless to me.
-
But I assure you, sir,
that the execution of my duties...
-
...is entirely unaffected
by my private opinion of you.
-
Be certain of that, Mr. Christian.
Be most entirely certain.
-
Land ho!
-
Land ho!
-
Prepare the ship for heavy
weather, if you please.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Boatswain, prepare the ship
for heavy weather!
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Ahoy, below! Breakers, dead ahead!
-
They ain't no breakers, they're combers!
-
Two oceans meeting head-on.
-
Lend a hand, Norman.
-
Captain's orders to wear
ship, Mr. Christian.
-
- Do so.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
- All hands on deck! Come on!
- Come on. Come on.
-
- All hands lay aloft.
- We've only just come below.
-
- What's he think he's doing?
- Come on. Come on!
-
The forward storeroom, sir.
A barrel has broken loose.
-
- Take over, Mr. Fryer.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
Up helm. SEAMAN: Up helm.
-
Quickly, there, pull!
-
Mills, Norman, Bennett.
-
Watch it!
-
Bennett!
-
Wait a moment. Go tell Mr. Fryer
to let her run before the wind.
-
Right.
-
We've got to get a lash on it.
-
- Mr. Fryer, sir.
- What is it, Mills?
-
Mr. Christian said let
her run before the wind.
-
- Before the wind?
- We can't lash the barrels until she steadies.
-
- All right, go below.
- Right you are, sir.
-
Midship sail. SEAMAN: Midship sail.
-
Quintal, stand away. Now,
hold off till she steadies.
-
Hold her steady before the wind!
-
All right, she's steady. Norman,
Quintal, get a lash on that cask.
-
Pass me a line.
-
- What the hell are you doing, Mr. Fryer?
- Mr. Christian's orders, sir.
-
- Barrel broke loose...
- Put the helm over instantly!
-
- But Mr. Christian's below, sir...
- Put the helm over!
-
- Downward helm.
- Downward helm, it is, sir.
-
Idiot!
-
Ah!
-
Secure those barrels.
-
Easy, now. Easy.
-
Careful.
-
Gently, now.
-
Move him carefully.
-
I'll get the medicine chest.
-
He's dead. BLIGH: Mr. Christian!
-
Mr. Christian!
-
Are you deaf as well as irresponsible?
I demand an explanation.
-
I thought she was holding steadily enough.
I ordered Norman under a water cask...
-
Never mind Norman, answer me.
-
Never mind Norman, sir?
-
There was no justification
in your ordering the ship hove to.
-
We lost a full league before I could
countermand your order. A full league.
-
- You countermanded my order, sir?
- Now, you heed me well, Mr. Christian.
-
We are embarked upon a king's mission.
-
Any further attempt at sabotage,
and I will deal with you as a traitor.
-
When you countermanded that order, sir, you
crushed the life out of Thomas Norman.
-
I suppose you would halt the ship
again for his burial service.
-
Since we are not at war, sir, I would hope
to give him a decent burial, yes, sir.
-
I am at war. Against ill winds, contrary
currents and incompetent officers.
-
You'd best join my war, Mr. Christian,
for if I don't start winning soon...
-
...the casualty list will be real enough.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
I make our position
here by dead reckoning.
-
If that's right,
three weeks should see us through.
-
We'll get through. Pumps
holding their own?
-
- Aye, sir.
- Good.
-
We'll go on the other tack now.
-
- Tack ship, if you please.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
All hands on deck. Tack ship.
Come on, Williams, up top.
-
- Get up. The Horn waits for no man.
- He'll drown the lot of us.
-
I know the way that man's mind works.
I felt it on my back.
-
Stop your grousing.
-
Portsmouth or Cape Horn,
it's all one to a seaman.
-
Well, it can't stay
overcast forever, sir.
-
Four weeks' blind tacking
is forever, Mr. Fryer.
-
And you know it.
-
Other tack, wear ship!
-
Downwind in this weather,
sir, is very dangerous.
-
We have no choice.
-
Weather braces. SEAMAN: Aye, aye, sir.
-
Starboard watch on deck.
Starboard watch on deck.
-
All hands on deck.
-
What's the matter?
-
Up helm!
-
- Steer two points starboard!
- Be ready to reverse your helm.
-
Lay away lee braces. All the way.
-
All the way, weather braces.
-
We're back where
we started four weeks ago.
-
Weather braces.
-
Bad news, sir. Your
cabin's completely awash.
-
Pumps are barely able
to hold their load, sir.
-
We've lost, Mr. Fryer.
-
- Make way for the Cape of Good Hope.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
- Here, here, here. What's all this, then?
- That, old son, is half a ration of meat.
-
- What do you mean, half a ration?
- Captain's orders.
-
Orders? You dish up a full plate
of that or I'll cut your curls off.
-
- I don't make the rules, I just dish the stuff.
- You'd better take it.
-
He's right. Half rations
are better than none at all.
-
- Why half rations? What for?
- Make up time, I suppose.
-
Starving the men don't make
the ship go no faster.
-
Saves stopping for stores, doesn't it?
-
So to catch up a couple weeks,
we starve all the way to Tahiti?
-
I'll tell you one thing,
it's against the regulations.
-
Regulations?
-
If we can be flogged by the regulations,
we can be fed by them.
-
Good. You convinced me. Now
go and convince the captain.
-
All right. Anybody coming along with me?
-
- To see the captain?
- That's right, the captain.
-
You sure it's the regulations?
How do you know?
-
- Because I read them.
- Hah.
-
A sailor with an education.
Like a singing pig.
-
All right, I'm with you.
-
What are you men doing in these quarters?
-
I brought them, sir. They
wish to state a complaint.
-
Let them do so.
-
Speak up.
-
Uh...
-
I'm begging your pardon, sir.
We're sorry to disturb you, sir.
-
If, uh...
-
If this isn't a good moment, sir,
why, this is nothing that won't...
-
That won't keep a while, sir.
-
No, no, no, please continue.
-
I'm always available to hear complaints.
-
Well, captain, sir, we've come
representing the whole crew.
-
It's about the half rations, sir.
And they ain't right, sir.
-
I'd like to... The crew
would like to remind you, sir...
-
...what it says in the regulations.
-
- You dare to quote the regulations to me?
- The regulations was made to go by, sir.
-
- We don't mean no impertinence, sir.
- But right is right, sir.
-
Five full months you've cost
me, you fumbling idlers.
-
Us? How, sir? What did we do?
-
This commission gave every man
in the ship's company...
-
...the key to opportunity. The
chance to show what he's made of.
-
Well, you've shown what you're made of:
-
Dirt and...
-
And empty silk nightcaps.
-
Well, I thought I heard your voice, sir.
Good night.
-
So you want full rations, do you?
-
Well, I'll give you all the rations
you need to get us to Tahiti in time.
-
Now, get out.
-
"All the rations you need
to get us to Tahiti on time."
-
Those were Captain Bligh's words.
-
Rations of what, he didn't say.
-
But he soon showed us.
-
Rations of his favorite
commodity: punishment.
-
Served up to the tune of his favorite
music: A cry of pain, a scream of agony.
-
That was the concert that played
across three oceans...
-
...as the months vanished
from the calendar...
-
...and Captain Bligh's tension increased.
-
Three.
-
Come down on deck,
you clumsy lubbers!
-
And that jib, hoist it taut.
-
Land ho!
-
Land ho!
-
This island is inhabited
by over 200,000 savages.
-
Eleven years ago, when
I was here with Captain Cook...
-
...they were not dangerous.
-
But the natives of the Sandwich
Islands seemed friendly enough...
-
...but without warning, they turned
on Cook and killed him.
-
We shall take all due
military precautions.
-
In case we find ourselves welcome...
-
...you will discover that these savages
have absolutely no conception...
-
...of ordinary morality.
-
And you will, no doubt, take full
advantage of their ignorance.
-
It is a matter of supernatural
indifference to me...
-
...whether you contaminate
them or they contaminate you.
-
I have but one concern: our mission.
-
Let any one of you provoke
an incident which endangers it...
-
...and I shall cause that man to curse
his mother for giving him birth.
-
Lee braces, Mr. Christian.
-
Stand by the anchor.
-
Let go.
-
Hoist out the launch.
I shall want 12 men.
-
- Aye, aye, sir.
- Mr. Fryer, give them muskets.
-
And arm another six men
and put them in the cutter.
-
At the first sign of treachery,
open fire and help us to retreat.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Select a work detail
before you go ashore.
-
Advise Mr. Christian.
-
If our reception is friendly, start
gathering the plants right away.
-
One plant will be
enough to tell the story.
-
I must find a specimen that has
sprouted from the root.
-
- Then instruct your men accordingly.
- Very good, sir.
-
No, not as a walking stick, Brown.
-
Bring the cutter in closer.
-
King George?
-
No, Your Excellency.
-
But King George ordered me to pay
his compliments to King Hitihiti.
-
I talk, you talk.
-
I go Captain Cook.
-
Visit many island.
-
You, Mr. Bligh.
-
Me, Minarii.
-
I know, I remember you well. Our
island pilot, and a fine one.
-
Oh, yes, very wonderful.
-
Will you please tell King Hitihiti...
-
...that King George sends
many tokens of friendship.
-
Hitihiti say, "What
he have King George want?"
-
This is what we've come
for, Your Excellency.
-
Breadfruit.
-
Uru?
-
That's right, uru.
-
Uru.
-
King George wants his people
to be as strong as your people.
-
He wants your breadfruit to nourish them.
-
Hitihiti say, "Take
all breadfruit you want."
-
You are most grateful, Your Excellency.
Thank you.
-
Here you are, Brownie.
This is one, isn't it?
-
No, no. Nothing like it.
-
Brown. Is that it over there?
-
Right you are, sir.
-
Right you are.
-
Artocarpus incisa.
-
- Hey?
- Isn't it amazing?
-
Such a delicate sprig,
with the power to feed a continent.
-
There's evidence to prove
that a diet of breadfruit...
-
- ...can sustain life all by itself.
- Whose life?
-
- Not mine.
- Lay on, Mills.
-
Watch your toes, then.
-
They're like a string of live pearls.
-
Must be some sort of game.
-
- Women only.
- Damn dull game.
-
Oh, it has its possibilities.
-
Not a single man among them.
-
How many women do you
suppose are down there?
-
- Enough.
- Here...
-
...do you think we need
to tell the others?
-
Look at those fellows.
-
They're flogging the water.
-
- What they do?
- Chase fish for feast.
-
You like go?
-
Go ask him.
-
- Go on.
- I'll ask him.
-
There. Now you
see the new roots...
-
- I beg your pardon, sir.
- ...like little veins.
-
- Would you...?
- Down into the earth.
-
- Just for a moment, sir?
- Wonderful.
-
- What is it, Mills?
- They tend to be shorter, or longer.
-
It's a debatable point. Some favor
the longer, some the shorter.
-
They're fishing, sir.
-
I beg your pardon, sir.
-
Seeing them down there, working
their fingers to the bones...
-
...we thought, that is,
the lads and I thought...
-
...that we might just... Well, just nip
along and give them a little hand, sir.
-
Something to talk about when we get home.
-
Yes, sir. Considering our mission, sir.
-
Now, can we give them a hand, sir?
-
Yes, I think we should
all give them a hand.
-
Mr. Christian, I'm ready
for a man to help me ball the root.
-
- To what?
- Ball the root.
-
Well...
-
- Well, Mills...
- Gosh, sir, I...
-
I don't know a thing
about gardening, sir.
-
Honest, I don't.
-
Well, go on, then.
-
- Thank you, sir.
- Thank you, sir.
-
- I'm ready, Mr. Christian.
- Oh, damn you, Brown, I'm coming!
-
Do you speak English?
-
Watch out for sharks, men.
-
Climb over.
-
Mates? Hey, mates, what's that?
-
Don't be scared, I doubt
they'll take you home with me.
-
Fish are breaking, boys, look there.
-
- Well, is it dormant or isn't it?
- I couldn't say, sir.
-
Only the transplant itself can
answer you, by living or dying.
-
- And when can I expect its decision?
- Perhaps 12 hours. Perhaps three weeks, sir.
-
Excellent. You can't say yet.
-
Perhaps 12 hours, perhaps three weeks.
-
We've traveled a gardener 29,000 miles...
-
...to be told we don't even know
the condition of the breadfruit.
-
Excellent.
-
I heard that if that bread
plant dries up...
-
- ...we could be here four or five months.
- Better pray it don't.
-
- Pray it don't?
- What do you mean?
-
How did you like your voyage
out here, then?
-
Nice? Comfortable? Nothing but fair
and proper treatment from the captain, eh?
-
- Worst I ever remember.
- Well, what makes you...
-
...want to get under way, then?
-
Use your head. If Bligh gets
cooped up here for five months...
-
Five months. Who do you
think he'll take it out on?
-
You think we sweated it making for the Horn?
Wait until we make for Jamaica.
-
- We'll worry about that when it comes.
- Aye.
-
- Might as well at that, mate.
- I wonder why those women eat alone.
-
Because if they didn't,
you'd be too busy to eat.
-
Funny lot. They let us make
free with their women...
-
...and they won't let us eat with them.
Isn't that like locking up the wrong door?
-
Hitihiti say, "Captain dance
with daughter now."
-
Dance? No. Not me.
-
I thank Your Excellency,
but I don't dance.
-
No say "no." Hitihiti angry.
-
My apologies, Your Excellency.
-
I did not understand.
-
You are amused?
-
I hope I shall not be, sir.
-
But it does seem a rather
difficult dance, doesn't it?
-
We shall see.
-
My soul.
-
Sorry to spoil your evening,
but you said...
-
...you wished to be informed
of any development.
-
It looks wilted, Brown.
-
It's dead, sir.
-
Well...
-
Might...? Might there not be other
plants that would flourish?
-
Sir, this proves that the dormant
season has begun.
-
Well, you did the best you could, sir.
-
It's a pity the Admiralty will blame
you in any case for the delay...
-
...but it's an unjust world. My sympathy.
-
I dislike failure.
-
I dislike it as much
as the Admiralty does.
-
Forgive me.
-
I... I have a partner over there.
-
You'll forgive me, please.
-
Hello.
-
Fletcher Christian is my name.
-
Is my name.
-
No, no. Fletcher.
-
No, no, Fletcher.
-
All right.
-
Thank you.
-
Well, how very sweet.
-
Now, Maimiti, if I may...
-
Well, that's a kiss.
-
Kiss.
-
No, no, Fletcher.
-
Yes, Fletcher.
-
Yes, yes, Fletcher.
-
- Yes, Fletcher.
- Yes.
-
Mr. Christian.
-
- You spoke, sir?
- That's the king's daughter you tamper with.
-
You should know better
than to risk his displeasure.
-
Kindly satisfy your lust elsewhere.
-
Quite actually, sir, we were
simply discussing the...
-
The incredible variety
of Tahitian vegetation.
-
- It was...
- Acknowledge the order.
-
Lust to be satisfied elsewhere, sir.
-
But not today. Report
onboard immediately.
-
You bloody fool.
-
Well, I'm sorry, old girl.
-
Good morning.
-
Thank you. Would you like to come aboard?
-
You come here.
-
Yes, of course.
-
You tell Captain Bligh...
-
...he not get breadfruit.
-
No breadfruit?
-
Last night you go away from Maimiti.
-
Yes, regretfully. You see, I...
-
Hitihiti say, "Daughter not
good enough for England...
-
...breadfruit not good enough."
-
Well, that's certainly
a very sound point of view.
-
You tell Captain Bligh, no breadfruit.
-
Yes.
-
May I suggest that you tell
Captain Bligh yourself?
-
You see, I don't think
that he would believe me.
-
- I tell, yes.
- Thank you.
-
- Mr. Morrison?
- Aye, sir?
-
Would you direct this gentleman
to Captain Bligh, please?
-
Yes, sir. Please, come with me.
-
You sent for me, sir?
-
Sit down.
-
A rather awkward situation has developed.
-
That daughter of Hitihiti's...
-
...it seems he's quite attached to her.
-
Yes, she's a lovely girl.
-
In a civilized society...
-
...certain lewd intentions toward the female
members of one's family...
-
...would be regarded as...
-
Well, as an insult.
-
Do you follow me?
-
- I think so, sir.
- But in Tahiti...
-
...the insult lies in the omission
of those lewd intentions.
-
Manners that would offend
a dockside harlot...
-
...seem to be the only acceptable
behavior to King Hitihiti.
-
Well, it takes all sorts
to make a world, sir.
-
What I'm trying to say is that you
have offended his code of etiquette.
-
I can assure you, sir,
that I have done nothing...
-
...that could be construed as offensive.
-
I know, I know. That's just the point.
-
Which point, sir?
-
The success of our mission depends
upon retaining the goodwill of Hitihiti.
-
Well, there's no... There's no
doubt of that, sir.
-
Well, then.
-
Well, you have my fullest attention, sir.
-
Don't you understand what I'm saying?
-
I'm trying to understand exactly
what it is you wish me to do, sir.
-
Make love to that damn daughter of his.
-
Is that an order, sir?
-
- Might I have it entered in the log?
- That will be all.
-
You see, it is a rather
different thing...
-
...than being asked
to fight for one's country.
-
Very well, sir.
-
I'll try my best, sir.
-
Thank you, sir.
-
I'll have the cutter, Mr. Fryer.
-
Aye, aye, sir. Hold the cutter.
Mr. Christian coming aboard.
-
Shall I take you
off the duty roster, sir?
-
Yes, my commission ashore
will detain me quite some time.
-
Thank you, Mr. Fryer.
-
How do you do?
-
No, no, Fletcher.
-
Well, it's... I hardly know
where to begin, Maimiti.
-
The ship's company
was pleased to have it confirmed...
-
...that the Tahitians considered
lovemaking a gesture of goodwill.
-
It may sound improbable, but do
you know the goodwill...
-
...in the hearts of our crew turned
out to be practically boundless?
-
And the Tahitian ladies gave them
every opportunity to prove it.
-
You see, to the Tahitians, a light
skin was a mark of beauty.
-
Men with fair complexions,
like Englishmen...
-
...were regarded as beautiful...
-
...no matter how nonsensically
their features were arranged.
-
They were beautiful
and they could do no wrong.
-
So they did no wrong
at every possible opportunity.
-
Beautiful evening, sir.
-
Beautiful.
-
Sounds as though they enjoy it ashore.
-
- Doesn't it?
- Yes, sir.
-
Forgive the liberty, captain...
-
...but you have not spent one evening
ashore yourself yet, have you?
-
I don't intend to.
-
It's a remarkably friendly island, sir.
-
It's a shame to be lonely in this port.
-
While our mission remains unfulfilled,
I'm not in any port, Mr. Fryer.
-
I am in command, where you may
find, one day, it's always lonely.
-
You see, command allows no intimacies.
-
You can hardly expect
unquestioning obedience...
-
...from last night's partner
in a debauch.
-
Suppose not, but it
does seem a pity, sir.
-
I prefer it that way.
-
Yes, sir.
-
The men are a little slow,
sir, but we know...
-
There was only one man who refused
to take things as they came...
-
...Tahitian style. He was in love.
-
And when you saw his girl,
it was hard to blame him.
-
But Tahitian-style love wasn't for him.
-
He wanted things shipshape
in Bristol fashion.
-
So he went to Captain Bligh
and asked to be married.
-
Well, I had seen Bligh every day
for more than a year...
-
...and that was the only time
I ever saw him laugh.
-
Midshipmen.
-
It'd be a dull navy without them.
-
Now get that slut off my ship.
-
He didn't have to put it
to the boy like that.
-
- The old pig.
- His shadow don't fit his shape...
-
...not by a damn sight.
-
We'll expect it to grow horns.
-
You will, Quintal. You'll see
it after we lift anchor.
-
If I be a judge, a man would beg
to settle for the cat...
-
- ...even before we see Jamaica.
- Aye.
-
You know something?
-
A man could have a fine
life for himself out here.
-
Fletcher Christian.
-
- My word, how lovely.
- Minarii.
-
Just exquisite.
-
Beautiful work. Oh, isn't that jolly.
-
Maimiti.
-
Oh, yes. Would you excuse me, please?
-
I want to say goodbye to her.
-
Tell King George send for me.
-
I am good Englishman.
-
I have plenty breadfruit, plenty hog.
Feed all England.
-
Yes, well, he's certainly in need of hogs,
and I'll tell him the first time I see him.
-
Would you excuse me? Thank you.
-
Well, Maimiti, it's time.
-
I'll be leaving in a few hours.
-
I wait.
I wait you, Fletcher.
-
I look for you every day.
-
Maimiti, there must be some way
to make you understand...
-
...that I won't be back.
-
And if you look for me, you
will only be unhappy...
-
...and I wouldn't like that.
-
Never come back to me?
-
Never come back to Tahiti, one time?
-
No.
-
But I'll remember.
-
You see...
-
...I've been happy here, Maimiti.
-
I'll remember you...
-
...and the lovely time
we've had together.
-
Your sweet face, your beauty.
-
But England is my home...
-
...and it's time to say goodbye.
-
I must go.
-
Goodbye.
-
Goodbye, Maimiti.
-
Take care.
-
Well, that just about does it, sir.
-
These 20, and we're all done.
-
There they are.
-
They've got
the boat, like they said.
-
What if we're caught?
-
Look, we've been over that often enough.
-
Captured deserters hang,
but we won't be caught.
-
I wish I could be sure of it.
-
Why don't you stop
shilly-shallying and come on?
-
Sorry to be a boor, Ned, but your work
party's gone dallying...
-
...and Mr. Fryer's on his way.
-
I think you'd look graceless
being bent over a cannon...
-
...so I suggest that we go collect them.
-
Idiots.
-
Hello, Minarii!
-
Overtake that canoe.
-
They'll need a strong wind to outrun us.
-
Well, they'll not find
one this side of the reef.
-
No, not that passage! We'll capsize!
-
Not enough time!
We've got to chance it!
-
Quite an interesting gathering.
-
What are those deserters doing here?
-
Why aren't these men in irons?
-
The men are being bandaged, sir.
-
And as to whether they're deserters,
I'm a naval officer, I'm not a judge.
-
To my mind, you are neither.
-
Confine them in the cable tier.
Release them for duty only.
-
We haven't been heard, sir. Haven't
we got the right to be heard, sir?
-
Oh, yes, indeed you have. At
your court-martial in Jamaica...
-
...you may be heard right
up to the moment you hang.
-
Did you say cable tier, sir?
-
In irons.
-
Six weeks in that stinking,
filthy hole...
-
...and there won't be
enough left of them to hang.
-
I wonder why an alleged gentleman...
-
...should give his first
loyalty to ordinary seamen.
-
Instead of to other alleged gentlemen?
-
Impertinence noted. It shall be logged.
Do you care to enlarge the entry?
-
Yes. Only with this observation...
-
...which I will report
to the Admiralty in any case:
-
In my years of service,
I've never met an officer...
-
...who inflicted punishment upon men
with such incredible relish.
-
It's sickening.
-
Then go and be sick
in your cabin, Mr. Christian.
-
I have never met a naval officer
who was so proud of a weak stomach.
-
They forgot to take our knives.
-
They don't cut iron, do they?
-
No, but they cut throats. And
I ain't gonna live to hang. Not me.
-
Now, now, don't be hasty.
-
No? What's to wait for?
-
We're finished.
-
Most like, we are, yes.
-
But I don't intend cutting my throat.
Not yet, that is.
-
No? I suppose the angel of mercy's gonna
step out of a cloud and say:
-
"Captain Bligh, set those nice lads free.
And kindly be smart about it."
-
Something like that, yes. Yes.
-
Only, we're not the only people
onboard this ship...
-
...who can't swallow
much more of Mr. Bligh.
-
You're grasping at straws.
-
Who's gonna chuck him overboard?
This crew?
-
It wasn't the crew I was thinking of.
-
Who, then?
-
Christian.
-
- Mr. Christian.
- Ha, ha.
-
- Came after us and caught us, didn't he?
- It showed whose side he's on.
-
Aye.
-
It showed he was a king's officer,
that's all.
-
But I hope Bligh keeps pushing
him, like he did just now.
-
Christian will turn on him.
-
I know what he's thinking.
-
I can see it in his face.
-
And I do not intend to let him forget it.
-
Five months we'd spent in Tahiti.
They seemed more like five minutes.
-
The day of departure
would've been a black one for me...
-
...as it was for everyone
but Captain Bligh...
-
...except that I didn't have
a minute to dwell on it.
-
The Bounty had become
a seagoing greenhouse...
-
...with over a thousand potted
plants to be tended.
-
Captain Bligh had doubled our quota...
-
...thinking to please
the West Indies Company...
-
...and make amends for his tardiness.
-
Aboard ship, there's a danger
in having too much of anything...
-
...for then one is bound to have
too little of something else.
-
Well, go along, Mills.
-
Oh, dear.
-
Our first casualty.
-
We must resign ourselves to losing
a great many of them, sir.
-
There's just no way to stretch the water.
-
We don't have enough water?
-
In the ordinary way, plenty, sir.
But indoors, in this heat...
-
...they need twice the amount.
-
But...
-
...they would all live
if they had the extra ration?
-
Why, of course. But I measured
the kegs most carefully, sir...
-
- ...and there just isn't enough...
- Yes, yes.
-
Give them all the water they need, Brown.
-
We'll not have another dead plant.
-
Understand?
-
Yes, sir.
-
Fourteen degrees. Thirty-seven minutes.
-
Belay that.
-
And stow it away.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
- Mr. Christian.
- Yes, sir?
-
I'll have a sentry posted
at the water cask, if you please.
-
- Aye.
- I want this slung from the main...
-
...topgallant yardarm.
-
Any man desiring water
will climb and fetch it.
-
He may have just as much as this
ladle holds and no more.
-
Then he will replace
the ladle at the yardarm.
-
Are we short of water, sir?
-
Do you wish me to repeat the order?
-
No, sir, it's perfectly clear.
A bit bewildering, but clear.
-
Then do it. Don't think about it.
-
Thinking seems to confuse you.
-
- You go down, and I'll follow.
- Yeah?
-
All the way to the main topgallant
yardarm for that spoonful of water, eh?
-
Yeah, a man would sweat
more than he can drink.
-
That's a fine way to murder a fellow.
-
Mills.
-
- Yes, sir?
- If you feel free to speak disrespectfully...
-
...because you think you've nothing
more to lose, think again.
-
The captain may surprise you.
-
Aye, yes, sir. Yes, indeed, sir.
He'll surprise me.
-
He'll surprise me...
-
...if he doesn't kill half the ship's company
before we get to Jamaica. Mark me, sir.
-
I'll overlook what I heard
this time, Mills.
-
Thank you, sir.
-
Burkitt.
-
Sir?
-
Take this aloft.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
- What's the matter with him?
- He's got a touch of fever.
-
I told the boatswain.
He said sweat it out.
-
- I'll be all right if I get some water.
- Who wouldn't?
-
He hasn't had a drop in two days.
He's too weak to climb.
-
Why didn't you speak up?
I'll get the ladle for you.
-
It's against orders. I tried it.
Every man's gotta fetch his own.
-
Sick men too?
-
Well, that's a kindly rule.
-
I'll go daft. I've gotta get a drink.
-
Brown, you must
know that's unnecessary.
-
Drink all the water you need.
-
Don't try to climb the shrouds,
you don't know how.
-
If I may be allowed a protest, sir,
it's a matter of self-respect.
-
Damn your self-respect.
I'll not lose my gardener.
-
Damn my self-respect, sir?
-
- Then, indeed, would I be damned.
- Ah!
-
I hope you're satisfied. The
masthead is no place for novices.
-
- Even a qualified hand...
- You murdering fool!
-
I'll tear the throat out of you, you...
-
Mr. Fryer, this man will be keelhauled.
-
We'll give him tonight
to think about it...
-
...and keelhaul him in the morning.
-
Take him below and put him in irons.
Burkitt, Norton, lend a hand.
-
One.
-
One?
-
Yes, that's correct, Mills.
-
One more bit of insolence and you'll wish
that you'd fallen to the deck.
-
Fletcher, he can't do
such a thing, can he?
-
Hereafter, you will announce yourself
with a knock, if you don't mind.
-
You don't deceive me, Fletcher.
You feel the same way as I do.
-
Why, he's monstrous.
I believe he's insane.
-
He is the headmaster, overfond of caning.
-
You're the third-former who can
do nothing about it...
-
...but bleat and beat your head against the wall.
Now, stop being a nuisance.
-
You're not gonna patronize me
about this, Fletcher, midshipman or no.
-
You must protest, Fletcher.
Keelhauling is illegal.
-
It's tantamount to executing the fellow.
-
A champion of the obvious you are.
Of course he's executing the fellow.
-
What would my punishment be
were I to strike a captain?
-
Well, you know very well you should
be hanged, but that's not the point.
-
Well, that's exactly the point.
-
Ask yourself, why should
a common seaman...
-
...receive a lesser punishment
for exactly the same offense?
-
It doesn't alter the fact
keelhauling's illegal.
-
Even a common
seaman's entitled to a trial.
-
Take a pew. I'll have you a go at chess.
-
You may have the white. It
might improve your game.
-
Oh, come off it, Ned. Sit down.
-
The line's gone slack, sir.
-
Haul in.
-
There's nothing left to haul, sir.
-
Then cast him loose.
-
Get her under sail again.
-
Mr. Fryer.
-
Sir?
-
Headsails and courses.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Set headsail and courses.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
All hands make sail!
-
Set headsails and courses!
-
Man the tacks!
-
Man the braces!
-
Two.
-
Would you care for a drink?
-
No, thank you.
-
What are you standing there for?
-
Did you come down here to watch
my Adam's apple bob about while I drink?
-
No, I'm thirsty.
-
Well, take some water, then.
-
I couldn't. I couldn't get it down.
-
Puking hell, you're a bore!
-
Is it a bore to want to help men...
-
...whose lives are being torn
out of them by a madman?
-
Why not have the carpenter build you a cross
so you can drag it about the ship...
-
...and put ashes on your head?
That would suit you, wouldn't it?
-
I've known you all my life,
but I've never really known you till now.
-
You're just exactly what you seem to be:
-
A supercilious poseur,
without the slightest trace...
-
...of humanity or compassion.
-
Are you quite finished
with your impertinence?
-
Not quite. One needn't look
further for your character...
-
...than the pomade in your hair.
-
You will close your arrogant
mouth, Mr. Midshipman Young...
-
...or I'll have you on the rack.
-
That's a promise and an order.
-
Close that cask.
-
Damn your blood, close it!
-
Grab him, somebody!
-
Captain... The captain... The captain...
-
The water in the sea.
-
I told her I would leave.
-
The sea...
-
Where is she?
-
If it comes, I'll swim down...
-
...where it's cold and dark.
-
Then I'm dry, where it's cold...
-
The damn
fool's been drinking seawater.
-
- Are you certain?
- We caught him at it.
-
He's got a bucket of bilge
water hidden in the storeroom.
-
Must have been at it for days.
-
Well, you'd best bind him, then.
-
He won't be in his right head
for a while, if he lives.
-
Lives? He hasn't got a chance, sir.
-
Not without sweet water
to wash out his guts.
-
Well, can't he have it, sir?
-
Impossible, Quintal. You
know the captain's orders.
-
Up the ropes he goes.
-
Up he goes, up he goes...
-
I gotta go home. It's late.
-
The dinner's ruined, it's ruined.
-
The meat's burned to a crisp.
-
What a tongue that woman's got.
-
But she's a good sort.
-
You know, I'm not the easiest man
in the world to get along with.
-
- Steady, man.
- I got a terrible temper.
-
Three, Mr. Christian?
-
Get out of my way, Mills.
-
Up he goes, up he goes...
-
Hello. Here's the great face-reader.
-
That's a rare gift you have...
-
...for being wrong.
-
Leave him be.
-
At least he did give us some hope.
-
All of that water's for me.
-
He should be below, out of the sun.
-
I'll ask.
-
That mainmast needs attention, Mr. Fryer.
-
Aye, aye, sir.
-
Mr. Christian.
-
Kindly give me an explanation.
-
With the sea, with the water.
-
Williams has been drinking seawater, sir.
-
I was giving him some fresh water.
-
I'm afraid he'll die without it.
-
You'll give no one water
without my permission.
-
Take that ladle below.
-
Yes, sir.
-
You bloody bastard.
-
You'll not put your foot on me again.
-
Thank you.
-
Thank you. I've been puzzling for a means
to take the strut out of you...
-
...you posturing snob.
-
Now you've solved
that for me, haven't you?
-
You have witnessed Mr. Christian's act
of violence toward a superior officer.
-
He will be placed in confinement
until a court-martial can be convened.
-
In Jamaica, I expect.
-
And will your fashionable friends be
there to see your execution, I wonder?
-
Let's hope so.
-
Pity if your last function
were to be a social failure.
-
Mr. Fryer, take him below.
-
Ship's company...
-
...I'm taking command of this ship.
-
Mr. Fryer, I'll have
the keys to the arms chest.
-
You'll give him nothing!
-
Go below and arm the men off watch.
-
Stay where you are, Fryer!
-
You've given your last command, Bligh.
I'll have those keys, Fryer.
-
You heard my order.
-
One more order, Mr. Bligh...
-
...and I'll have your head on this deck.
By heaven, I swear it!
-
Don't, sir.
-
Mills.
-
Right, sir.
-
Go below and issue arms
to all those who are with us.
-
- Byrne!
- Aye.
-
It is pointless to incite
a mutiny, Mr. Christian.
-
It cannot succeed, and you know it.
-
Quintal, stop him!
-
Stop Mills in the arms room!
-
They're trying to take over the ship!
-
- It's a mutiny!
- Go, Mills! Go!
-
Your mutiny has not succeeded.
-
Perhaps not. But success
enough when it puts an end to you.
-
Mr. Christian!
-
The men are armed, Mr. Christian!
-
Come on, come on, McCoy, get them up.
-
I'm with you.
-
Come on in there.
-
Johnson!
-
Anybody else here with us?
-
Well?
-
Take over.
-
Mills.
-
Come on, move. Move, I said.
-
Come on. Come on. Come on, move.
-
The ship is ours, sir.
-
Very well. Guard him well, Quintal.
-
Brown, fetch my nautical
tables and sextant.
-
The left end of the shelf in my cabin.
Burkitt!
-
You too, Brown? You'd join these swine?
-
A man like yourself, sir,
leaves me no choice.
-
Swine, are we? Let's have
him on the grating.
-
I want medical
supplies and a compass.
-
All right, boys,
let's tie him up, then!
-
- Yeah. Tie him up. Flog him.
- All right, grab him.
-
Mills, hold that.
-
Get over there! Tie him up!
-
Stand away, here!
-
- There'll be no more killing aboard this ship.
- Let's kill him now and get it done!
-
- Aye, aye.
- No! I'm in command of this ship!
-
If there's a man amongst you who doubts
that, let me hear his voice.
-
There'll be no more killing aboard this
ship, not even Captain Bligh.
-
If that's an attempt to earn
clemency, I spit on it.
-
You remarkable pig.
-
You can thank whatever
pig God you pray to...
-
...that you haven't quite
turned me into a murderer.
-
Now, then, Quintal...
-
...Burkitt, hold him at the gangway.
Mills, come with me.
-
Mack, go below and fetch
Mr. Bligh's personal effects.
-
Ship's company.
-
I'm putting Mr. Bligh
and his party in the longboat.
-
He can make the island
of Tafoa in two days.
-
If there are any among you who wish
to join him, stand by the gangway.
-
Mills.
-
Mr. Fryer...
-
...you understand that it
wasn't my wish to harm you?
-
I... I hope that you weren't injured.
-
No, not at all. May I get my gear?
-
Certainly.
-
Goodbye, Mr. Fryer.
-
Goodbye, Mr. Christian.
I'm sorry for you.
-
- May God help you.
- Thank you.
-
Provisions aboard and ready
to lower away, sir.
-
- Lower away.
- Here you are, Mr. Christian.
-
Stand by.
-
He's sane enough to drink
all the water he's given.
-
I think he's coming around.
-
Fletcher, I'm proud to be with you.
-
Well, you've done rather well, Ned. Been
promoted to the rank of criminal...
-
...not even 20, and a death sentence
on your head. Take him below.
-
By your leave, sir.
-
Well, we've been talking it over, sir.
-
And...
-
Well, what? Well, get on with it.
-
We'd like to be with you,
but we've got families.
-
- Well, join the party at the gangway.
- Thank you, sir.
-
As you know, Tafoa
is due west, 40 leagues.
-
You have your compass. This book
is sufficient for its purpose.
-
The sextant is my own, so you
know it to be a good one.
-
Now, Mr. William Bligh...
-
Quite polite and formal, are we?
-
Playing the gentleman
again, you bloody traitor?
-
Mr. Fryer.
-
Can't you see we're overloaded?
-
One man more, and you'll sink me.
-
Heh. Well, if that's the case,
I volunteer.
-
You gotta let me go, sir.
I ain't a mutineer.
-
- Hold those men.
- Boats are heading to us.
-
We want to go too.
-
Now, I want it clearly
understood by yourself...
-
...and those of you below...
-
...that these men who remain
behind had no hand in this mutiny.
-
I don't want no part of it.
-
You will be put ashore safely at a British
port of call at the first opportunity.
-
How do we know when that will be?
-
How about our families?
-
Burkitt, confine these men below and station
an armed man at each hatch.
-
- Aye, aye. Get moving.
- Move, or you'll be shot!
-
Come on, quick, there. Come on, quick.
-
Take them below, Johnson. Come
on, quick in the back, there.
-
Has your murderous
friend told you what to expect?
-
Or is he going to keep you in the dark?
Now hear the truth:
-
The king's navy will not rest
until every mutineer is captured and executed.
-
Wherever you go, wherever you hide,
a thousand ships will search you out.
-
Let them! If not for Mr. Christian,
I'd give them more reason to look for me.
-
Will you step into the boat,
or will you be thrown in, Mr. Bligh?
-
I'm not leaving you, Mr. Christian.
-
Not ever. Go to the dirtiest
little corner of the world...
-
...I'll be there, right behind you,
with a rope in my hand.
-
One moment. Quintal.
-
Take your flag with you.
-
Hmmph.
-
I don't need a flag, Mr. Christian.
-
Unlike you, I still have a country.
-
What a big price to pay
for a little show of temper.
-
What a pity.
-
Steady. Watch your step.
-
We're rid of you now,
Bligh, you bloody maniac!
-
You and your cat and ladles of water!
-
Bye-bye, tyranny!
-
Hey, look, he forgot these.
-
Hey, fellas, let's sink him with them.
-
Hey, Bligh, you forgot this!
-
No more Bligh. All
the grog and water we can hold.
-
Hey, Bligh, you've forgotten something.
-
McCOY: We're rid of you now,
Bligh, you bloody maniac.
-
You and your cat
and your ladles of water.
-
Bye-bye, tyranny.
-
Give this to the Admiralty,
if you ever see them!
-
No breadfruit,
milord of the Admiralty.
-
No breadfruit? - No breadfruit.
-
Come in.
-
Are you ready for us, sir?
-
You men are now ship's officers.
-
Mills, you're first officer.
Burkitt, you're...
-
You're second.
-
And, Smith, you'll fill
the master's duties.
-
It's gonna be a bit awkward, sir...
-
...telling our mates to jump
to it when we have to.
-
Yeah, that's right. They'll think
we're proper poopers.
-
Let them think what they like.
-
A ship crashed on a reef has a better
chance than one without discipline.
-
No doubt about that,
but making our mates swallow it...
-
...that's the part that pinches.
-
I'll make the beggars heed me
if I have to break their necks.
-
Oh, here, listen to him, acting
like an officer already.
-
Hold that noise for the forecastle.
-
Your pardon, gentlemen.
-
I'm forgetting your new status.
-
Well, that's all right, sir.
We understand.
-
Well, at least the common
seamen are happy.
-
- They have a right. We won, didn't we?
- Aye, that we did.
-
Won?
-
Won what, you damn fool?
-
We got rid of Bligh.
-
I'd be a dead man if we didn't.
-
Or in prison for the rest
of my life, if I was lucky.
-
You're in prison now, Mills,
with one slight difference:
-
We are not locked in, we are locked out.
-
Briefly, for the moment,
our plans will be as follows:
-
We'll return to Tahiti
and deposit our prisoners.
-
We'll pick up all the water
and stores we can carry...
-
...and all the extra hands we can find.
-
And as to where we shall go after that...
-
...we shall not decide
until we're at sea again.
-
Is that all, sir?
-
Yes, that's all.
-
Excuse me, Mr. Christian, sir.
-
It isn't my place to say this,
but I know how you must be feeling.
-
Might I say though, sir,
considering my years and such...
-
What is it, Smith?
-
Things are gonna be all right for you, sir.
They've got to be.
-
When a man gives up as much as you did...
-
...just because he thinks it's right...
-
...the good Lord would never
let him down.
-
Wherever we might go, be it
to China or Iceland or anywhere...
-
...you'll find a happy life, sir.
-
It's God's will. I know.
-
I believe I did what honor dictated,
and that belief sustains me...
-
...except for a desire to be
dead, which I'm sure will pass.
-
Oh, yes. God bless you, sir.
-
We have 16 pieces of pork,
sir, 150 pieces of bread...
-
...38 gallons of water,
a gallon of rum...
-
...there's also a compass
aboard, a sextant...
-
- ...we have seven sea bags...
- Tafoa be damned.
-
Oars.
-
Get ready to make sail.
-
Your attention.
-
We shall not make for Tafoa.
-
We shall make for a port where we can
get passage to England immediately.
-
We'll head for Timor.
-
We might make it. What do you think?
-
That's nearly 4000 miles away, sir.
-
I'm well aware of that, Mr. Fryer.
-
Timor is 3600 miles away.
It's an arduous journey.
-
But the trade winds will be
in our favor all the way.
-
Do not be alarmed.
I will get you there safely.
-
Yeah, like you got us
around the Horn safely.
-
- Yeah.
- That's telling him.
-
It would be a mistake to imagine
that I am no longer in command.
-
I have at hand one means
of asserting my authority.
-
There will be no minor punishments.
-
Excuse me, sir.
-
Might I ask what is wrong with Tafoa,
as Mr. Christian suggested?
-
- Aye, Tafoa.
- Aye.
-
It would suit his book if it took us
a couple of years to get back to England.
-
The colder the trail, the safer he'll be.
-
It would suit him even better if the natives
of Tafoa turned out to be cannibals.
-
- Cannibals?
- Cannibals? Where? Tafoa?
-
This whole island group
is infested with cannibals.
-
Continue to make sail.
-
That should help improve
the morale a bit, Mr. Fryer.
-
Don't look so concerned.
-
You're quite right. The
odds are appalling.
-
You see, these mutineers must hang.
-
They must hang.
-
Fletcher, may I come in?
-
Not just now, Ned.
-
Well, we've dropped anchor.
-
Well, then go and make arrangements
with Minarii to land our prisoners.
-
It's a beautiful day.
Aren't you coming ashore?
-
Fletcher, you can't keep sitting
in your cabin like this.
-
It's unhealthy.
-
Oh, for God sakes, Ned, can't
you simply do as you're told?
-
McCOY: The way they laugh,
like they never heard of trouble.
-
They sound like wine tastes.
-
A man could get happy drunk
just listening to them.
-
Hutia. Hutia.
-
Hutia, where are you, girl? Come
here, my little kissing bug.
-
I got joyful news for you.
You're coming with us.
-
You're gonna make an ocean voyage.
-
Mr. Christian says we can take
women with us, if we want.
-
Hear that? You can take
a woman with you...
-
...if you can find one,
with your awful face.
-
Look who's talking. You're ugly
enough to turn a funeral up an alley.
-
And we're taking men with us too.
-
Minarii and five hands
to do our work for us.
-
What a navy.
-
It's too good for the likes of you.
-
Carting women along. He has me worried.
-
- What the hell does it all mean?
- Will you stop that "what's this all mean?"
-
I wonder why we don't just
stay here, in Tahiti.
-
You're mad. Tahiti's the first place
Bligh will come to look for us.
-
If he lives.
-
You ever try to drown a snake?
-
And a seagoing snake at that,
with a damn fine sextant.
-
And with a sextant, a good sailor man
like Bligh could make port in a hollow tooth.
-
Let's say he lives to see London and comes back here.
How will he find us...
-
- ...if we're hid deep in the hills?
- Easy. He'd ask Hitihiti.
-
Aye. That old rascal could be
bought for a bucket of glass beads.
-
Mr. Christian is bound to find us
someplace safe to go. You can trust him.
-
Yeah. Sitting all alone in his cabin.
He's changed a lot.
-
So would you be changed, if you lost what he lost.
There's been nothing...
-
- ...wrong with his plans so far, has there?
- Not a thing.
-
Except keeping us from giving
Bligh a taste of his own lash.
-
Hello, Maimiti.
-
Fletcher sick?
-
I'm very well, thank you.
-
Minarii tell Fletcher fight war.
Fletcher chief now.
-
Very small chief, Maimiti,
running for his life.
-
Minarii tell you take
Tahiti people away in ship.
-
Yes, we need men to sail it.
-
You take women too.
-
The men will want to be amused
while they look for a place to hide.
-
Maimiti go along you?
-
You not want?
-
I'm afraid there's no want left in me.
-
Now, if you don't mind,
I have some work to do...
-
...and I prefer to be alone to do it.
-
Maimiti go, you no lonely.
-
I don't need you to remind
me of my loneliness.
-
Maimiti go.
-
Are you deaf as well as ignorant?
-
Can't I make it clear to you that I have
no life to share with anyone?
-
No yelling Maimiti you!
-
You pig. Pig all over.
-
Do you really want to spend
your life with a man...
-
...who doesn't care
for anything on this earth?
-
Tahiti people say, you hate
life, all life hate you.
-
Maimiti go.
-
Lieutenant William Bligh, the court
has considered the charges against you...
-
...and their finding is that no
blame attaches to you...
-
...for the loss of His
Majesty's Ship Bounty.
-
You are therefore
most honorably acquitted.
-
The court finds that mutiny and piracy have
been committed against His Majesty's navy.
-
The court recommends to the First
Lord of the Admiralty...
-
...which shall be entered in the record
of these proceedings, to wit:
-
An expedition of pursuit be
commissioned posthaste...
-
...and charged to capture
and bring to justice...
-
...the parties responsible for the loss
of His Majesty's Ship Bounty.
-
They can hardly evade us for long.
-
I shall pray they do not, milord.
-
The court considers it has obligation
to add comment to its verdict.
-
By the force of evidentiary
conclusions...
-
...you, Captain William Bligh, stand
absolved of military misdeed.
-
Yet officers of stainless record
and seamen, voluntary all...
-
...were moved to mutiny against you.
-
Your methods, so far as this
court can deserve...
-
...showed what we shall cautiously
term an excess of zeal.
-
We cannot condemn zeal.
-
We cannot rebuke an officer who has
administered discipline...
-
...according to the Articles of War...
-
...but the articles are fallible,
as any articles are bound to be.
-
No code can cover all contingencies.
-
We cannot put justice
aboard our ships in books.
-
Justice and decency are carried
in the heart of the captain...
-
...or they be not aboard.
-
It is for this reason
that the Admiralty...
-
...has always sought to appoint its
officers from the ranks of gentlemen.
-
The court regrets to note that the appointment
of Captain William Bligh...
-
...was, in that respect, a failure.
-
Court is dissolved.
-
For several months, we sought
a suitable place to dwell.
-
The Bounty visited at least 30 islands.
-
None of them served our purpose.
-
In some cases, the natives repulsed us
with barrages of stones and arrows.
-
In others, we found the vegetation
too sparse to sustain life...
-
...or the water supply too limited.
-
But our disappointments
did not depress us.
-
Mr. Christian knew
how to keep a happy ship.
-
As for himself, he gave
no sign of discontent.
-
True, he had a habit of falling
into brown studies...
-
...of wrestling with some problem that took
him far away from where he stood.
-
Still, his failure to solve his private
riddle was never taken out on us.
-
He was no Bligh.
-
And the absence of Bligh
was a daily tonic.
-
Discipline, please.
Officers first.
-
No matter what sort of noise
they make, they always sound lovable.
-
They've sighted us. She's turning around.
-
Merchantman or man-of-war?
-
It's the whereabouts
of the sun concerns me now.
-
It'll set in about 40 minutes.
-
What is it, Mr. Christian?
-
It's an English warship, Mr. Mills.
-
Let her mark our course well.
-
- We'll alter it after dark.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
Douse all lights. Cold supper. No pipes.
-
- Mr. Burkitt.
- Sir?
-
- Arm all hands.
- Aye, aye, sir.
-
What's the hour?
-
About two bells.
-
I never spent a longer night.
-
Me neither.
-
I'm glad it's getting light.
-
I ain't.
-
What if she's still there?
-
We outrun her, or we outshoot
her, or we swing.
-
Not a sail in sight. Ned,
I'll have that glass.
-
No sight at all of her, sir?
-
What is it you were
looking at, then, sir?
-
It's land.
-
It's there...
-
...but it shouldn't be.
-
Mills, Brown, come with me.
-
Yes. This is our position,
give or take 10 miles.
-
Empty water.
-
What's this piece of land over here, sir?
-
That is Pitcairn lsland.
-
It's over 170 miles due east.
-
Or is it?
-
Well, it must be, sir. There
isn't land anywhere else about.
-
Yes, that's right.
-
This must be Pitcairn.
It's charted wrong.
-
And then it's charted wrong on every single
official chart in the British navy.
-
Don't you see? Pitcairn's 175 miles
away from where it actually lies.
-
And it can only be found
by accident, just as we have done.
-
We must find out whether
or not it's inhabited...
-
...and if their people are friendly.
-
Mills, I want you to take an armed party.
Go ashore. We'll cover you.
-
Minarii, have
your men stand by to cover.
-
Well, it looks deserted.
-
No people here.
-
Tell Mr. Christian.
-
Well, laddies, how does it feel
to be land-owning squires, eh?
-
No tenants making hungry mouths at us.
-
- No poachers either, eh?
- Yeah. Yeah.
-
Come on, let's take a little twirl
around our estate, then.
-
That's a good idea. Come
on, Mr. Kew Gardens.
-
Breadfruit. Thank you.
-
Mr. Young. Look, yams, papaya, taro root.
-
Why, the island's a garden.
Beautiful, rich soil.
-
- What's that?
- It's some sort of a tuber.
-
I can't tell till I cultivate it.
-
Do you think Mr. Christian
would like the garden right here?
-
Well, not if we decide to live
on the other side of the island.
-
- I got it!
- Good shot!
-
Here! Burkitt! Mr. Young!
There's tons of food here!
-
Here. I've just seen enough game
to feed the whole of the British navy.
-
- I'm not kidding you.
- Water aplenty. And fish.
-
Big ones. Real big ones.
-
Hey, mates. Look here.
-
Pigeon pie for dinner.
-
Pigeon? With red feathers?
-
All right, whatever it is, then.
They're pretty, isn't he?
-
- Yeah.
- The tail feathers are for Hutia.
-
- This is better than Tahiti.
- It's the climate, it's cooler.
-
Well, it's not the climate we're tasting.
It's that lovely mapmaker's mistake.
-
Mates, there's only one thing
missing: Captain Bligh.
-
- Oh, yes. What a shame.
- I'd give a leg or two if he could see us now.
-
Eating to our content,
without a care in the world.
-
I like him better where he is. I like him
going away in his little boat...
-
...with the hot sun beating
down on his hot head.
-
Well, God grant him a dry mouth.
-
Do you remember when he bid us
goodbye, all blown up like a toad?
-
"I'll never leave you, Mr. Christian.
Not ever.
-
No matter where you go, I'll always be
at your shoulder with a rope in me hand."
-
Of course, he's a man
of his word, is Captain Bligh.
-
- So perhaps we ought to set him a plate.
- That's a good idea.
-
Why, hello there. Captain Bligh, sir.
-
Sit down, sir. Sit down.
-
Here. Have a bird wing or two...
-
...and kindly explain why you ain't here.
-
There's no doubt about it.
-
Nobody's glad to see a captain
who comes home without his ship.
-
You know, I'd give a stick
of tobacco to see his ruddy report.
-
Those Admiralty
lords will look at him...
-
...like he was a piece of rotten biscuit.
-
I'm afraid your laughter
is unwarranted, gentlemen.
-
Captain Bligh will be acquitted.
-
He'll be given another ship, and a larger
cat-o'-nine-tails to run it with.
-
You're forgetting, mates of ours went along with Bligh.
They'll tell what the old pig did.
-
They'll tell how he was out to execute
us all, one by one.
-
Sure.
-
Your friends are under the shadow
of arraignment themselves for mutiny...
-
...if Bligh chooses to charge
that they failed to rally to his calls...
-
...or to protect him properly. Why
should they invite his anger?
-
They won't be given any choice.
They'll be asked questions.
-
- The facts speak for themselves.
- Right.
-
The bare facts alone
will not indict Bligh.
-
It's the privilege of every captain...
-
...to decide when an emergency warrants
the reduction of water rations.
-
Who can deny there was an emergency?
-
The Bounty carried breadfruit...
-
...vital to the economic
life of the British Empire.
-
Do you suppose it'll be acceptable
that Bligh should return...
-
...after a two-year voyage
with his ship laden with dead plants?
-
Better than with dead men, sir.
-
You're forgetting
the traditional answer, Mills:
-
The mission comes first
and the lives of men second.
-
Well, it's all the one to us now. Let them
make Bligh king of China, if they want to.
-
We can forget him, thank God, and I move
we start forgetting him right now.
-
Bligh guilty or Bligh not guilty...
-
...it makes no difference
to our lovely little island.
-
And if it did, we could write out papers,
telling our side of the story...
-
...seal them in bottles
and send them on the sea.
-
That's a thought. One of them might
reach England ahead of Bligh.
-
That'd put a spike in his coffin.
-
We can make certain
that his coffin is spiked.
-
What do you mean, sir?
-
By returning to England ourselves.
-
- Well, what the holy hell for?
- You're not serious, Mr. Christian?
-
It's a joke he'll be
after having, that's all.
-
- Well, it's a joke to spoil me dinner.
- Hold it, hold it, hold it.
-
Mr. Christian is meaning
what he says, I'm afraid.
-
Yes, I am, Mills.
-
And I've got a better idea, sir:
-
We hang each other
from the yardarms in the morning.
-
- It'll save us a trip.
- Yeah.
-
Listen to me for one moment,
gentlemen, please.
-
I put it to you that we shall never
find contentment on this island.
-
Sir, it sounds like you've gone
out of your mind.
-
There's no chance for us
to go back to England...
-
...give Bligh a bad name
and walk free men ourselves.
-
And anyone who thinks otherwise hasn't
got the sense that God gave geese.
-
You're right, Mills.
-
We may all very well be hanged.
-
But decency is worth fighting for.
You can't live without it.
-
And hiding here, shivering
like convicts...
-
...when we've a just case to present
to the courts, is just another way of dying.
-
And a far less bearable one.
-
I didn't know until this moment...
-
...what the rightful course
to pursue was, but I know it now.
-
Will you trust me?
-
Look, supposing
Bligh's been picked up already?
-
Supposing he's been tried and acquitted
by the time we get there?
-
Let it be so. Our court-martial will be
Bligh's court-martial over again.
-
Our jeopardy will be
Bligh's jeopardy as well.
-
And our acquittal will be Bligh's defeat.
-
It'll mean no more Captain William Bligh,
or any like him in His Majesty's service.
-
We need only persuade the British people
of something they already know...
-
...that inhumanity
is its poorest servant.
-
Gentlemen, I beg you.
-
Help me to carry that word
back to England.
-
That's...
-
That's a big thought for people like us.
-
Do you mind if we take
the night to talk about it?
-
Certainly.
-
Mills, Quintal, Burkitt,
Minarii, quickly!
-
The ship's afire. Hurry,
for God's sake, everyone!
-
She's afire! Come quickly!
-
Mills, Quintal, Burkitt!
-
They ain't here! Hurry!
-
Come on!
-
Get the boat in the water.
-
Madatafoa, as soon as we get aboard,
you and Tamas slip the anchor.
-
Brown, you and Minarii
will hoist the sail.
-
When she begins to make headway,
we'll sink her on the shallows.
-
Ned, you and I will go
below and open the seacocks.
-
She can be refloated
if we can save the hull.
-
We're fast on a rock.
-
Right through the hull.
-
Have you got the sextant, Ned?
-
What?
-
Have you got the sextant?
-
No.
-
- You can't go now, it's too late, Fletcher!
- We'll never leave here without it!
-
- Fletcher, you can't go down!
- Abandon ship!
-
The cutter's heading back.
They've given up.
-
Easy with him. Gently.
Careful, now.
-
Find something to cover him.
-
Minarii, go to my tent.
You'll find a chest.
-
In it is a medicine case.
Bring it, quickly.
-
And bring a lamp or a torch.
We shall need light.
-
Oh, my God, my God.
-
There's some laudanum
in the medicine case.
-
It'll stop his pain within a few minutes.
-
He'll need it, if he regains
consciousness.
-
Here, Ned.
-
Spread it gently.
-
Easy.
-
Maimiti go
make Tahitian medicine.
-
I gave him all the laudanum there was.
-
He'll feel nothing, as soon
as he assimilates it.
-
Now...
-
...we must cut away
what's left of his clothing.
-
Look at that.
-
My God.
-
- It's us done that to him.
- My God.
-
Get away from here.
-
Get away or I'll cut your throats,
you murdering scum!
-
Ned, it's useless.
-
He saved my life, I gave
him bad for good.
-
I never done that to anybody
in my life before.
-
Brown.
-
- What's happened, Brown?
- We're on the beach, Mr. Christian.
-
There was an accident.
-
You've been burned,
and you must lie still.
-
- Am I hurt badly?
- Not too bad.
-
You're going to be all right, but it's important
that you stay as still as possible.
-
The Bounty?
-
It's hopeless.
-
It's gone.
-
- The sextant, did we...? Have we lost it?
- No, I have it here, Mr. Christian.
-
Hide it, Brown. Hide it, quickly.
-
So it was your work,
the burning, was it, you filth?
-
I have no want in me to harm you.
-
For the love of God, believe
I regret what has happened to you.
-
We all do.
-
But each man has to follow
his own belief, no matter what.
-
You've said this many times
after the mutiny.
-
Well, I did what I thought I had to do.
-
I burned the Bounty for the good of all.
-
It wasn't in bad faith.
It was just bad luck.
-
For the good of all, Mills?
-
Hm?
-
Yes, sir.
-
But why did you have to burn the Bounty?
-
You'd no reason to fear me.
-
We were afraid, Mr. Christian.
-
We were afraid you were gonna
take us to London by force.
-
Oh, God.
-
We're sick and sorry
for what's happened to you.
-
We'll never forget
what you've done for us.
-
It's all right, Mills.
It wasn't your fault.
-
Bligh left his mark on all of us.
-
Goodbye, Mr. Christian.
-
May God have mercy on you.
-
Am I...?
-
Am I dying, Brown?
-
Yes, Mr. Christian.
-
What a useless way to die.
-
It's not useless, Fletcher. I swear it.
-
Maybe we'll get to London, or maybe not.
-
The Blighs will lose.
-
We'll tell our story somehow, to someone.
-
It only needs one of us to survive.
-
Never mind that, Maimiti.
We haven't much time.
-
Please...
-
Please know that...
-
That I...
-
I loved you...
-
...more than I knew.
-
And...
-
...if I'd only...
-
...had time to...
-
To...
-
Oh, Fletcher...