8/10
High Seas Hijinks and Courtroom melodrama in one.
20 October 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The Wreck of the Mary Deare, is an exciting piece of cinema. Although not a masterpiece and it was clear no Oscars were going to be won here, we are with all presented with a classic yarn that has a montage of rich ingredients.

The first forty minutes of the film is pure unadulterated peril on the high seas as salvage man John Sands (Charlton Heston) boards the apparently derelict "Mary Deare" during a massive storm in the English Channel.

On investigation Sands finds that part of the ship has been burnt out and gutted and the entire crew have abandoned ship. Just as Sands is about to take his new prize in tow, Acting Captain Gideon Patch (Gary Cooper) appears, the one crew member to stay behind, put out the fires and fight the "Mary Deare" through the rough seas to safety.

However it becomes clear to Sands, that reaching port is the last thing on Patch's mind as he purposely steers and beaches the ship onto the Minquieries, a plateau of deadly rocks - "a ships graveyard" Patch assures the confused Sands that this self destruction of his ship was done for a specific reason and begs Sands not to give away her final position until an official court of enquiry.

Sands and Patch are eventually picked up and are met on shore by a gaggle of police and maritime insurance agents desperate to know the final fate of the "Mary Deare" and a rescued crew with an altogether different version of events of the one that Patch himself tells.

Sly second Officer Higgins, brilliantly portrayed by the great Richard Harris tells of Patch's poor seamanship since assuming command and his panic at the fire and the rushed decision to abandon ship which has caused the death of so many of the crew.

Sands then questions whether he has 'backed the right horse' especially as Captain Patch already has a reputation for 'losing ships' in the past. However he stays true to his word and fails to divulge the valuable information he holds on the final resting place of the "Mary Deare"

There follows a maritime court of enquiry where after days of restraint, Patch is able to speak his piece and put the cat amongst the pigeons. Patchs testimony tells of how the ships fire and the evacuation was orchestrated by the "Mary Deares" owners and carried out by Higgins and other unscrupulous members of the crew, so that they can claim not only against the loss of the ship but also it's valuable cargo. However Patch is convinced and can provide the necessary evidence to prove that the real cargo had already been offloaded at Rangoon and replaced with crates of stone.

This evidence is the substituted cargo itself, now secured in number three hold of the "Mary Deare". This he explains is why he beached the ship on The Minquieries, so she will lie in shallow enough water for the hold and the aforementioned crates to be officially examined thereby proving the deception.

But when his calls for an official examination fall on deaf ears he and Sands take matters into their own hands and venture out to the "Mary Deare" to supply the said evidence themselves.

Also Minquieries bound is the desperate Higgins, under orders from the the equally desperate owners to finally sink the tell-tale ship and silence Patch forever into the bargain.

Can Sands and Patch prove the truth before Higgins and Co, or the ships final plummet into the murky depths take their lives?

With notable support from Micheal Redgrave, Alexander Knox and Virginia McKenna, it is really an exciting couple of hours worth of cinema. From the high sea adventure through the courtroom drama to the typical finale of the good guys meeting the bad guys, The Wreck of the Mary Deare stands up as a good old fashioned ripping yarn.
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