Mutiny on the Bounty 1935
Mutiny on the Bounty was nominated for eight Oscars, but won the only one that counted: Best Production.
It contained myriad historical accuracies:
Captain Bligh was never on board HMS Pandora, the ship that caught the Bounty crew who remained on Tahiti . Bligh wasn’t present at their trial.
Bligh might not have been the brutal sadist depicted by the movie. Keelhauling had been abandoned as a punishment long before Bligh’s time.
The ship’s log indicates few sailors were flogged. The Bounty had only two deaths: a seaman, of scurvy, and the ship’s surgeon, apparently of his own drinking.
Mr. Christian likely was not inspired to take over the ship after several crewmen have unjustly been cast into irons by Bligh.
Instead of founding an idyllic society on Pitcairn Island , all the mutineers died from drunkenness and murder. Rape of the island women was frequent. Many of their ancestors remain there today.
There was a real-life mutiny aboard the real HMS Bounty, led by Fletcher Christian against Captain Bligh. Fictional Midshipman Roger Byam really did try to stop the mutiny, failed, and was convicted by the lords of the admiralty. Real-life middie Peter Heywood, 15, was convicted of the mutiny of 1789, but later acquitted and served 29 years, retiring as a captain.
Bligh and the 19 other loyal officers and crew were put aboard a lifeboat, and Christian went back to Tahiti for the native women they’d fallen for when they had stopped to buy breadfruit plants. They were to deliver the breadfruit (a fruit which can be roasted and tastes like bread or potato) for slaves.
But enough about the facts. The movie was inspirationally cast with Charles Laughton as the toadish Captain Bligh, the boyish Franchot Tone as Mr. Byam, and Clark Gable (the Oscar winner the previous year for It Happened One Night, which also won for Best Production). All three were nominated for Best Actor, but none won.
Gable is the rakish buccaneer who hated his tyrannical captain, and Laughton is captain who resented his popular and wise first officer. (Christian: “He doesn't punish men for discipline. He likes to see men crawl.”)
A 1962 remake starring Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard would result in a three-star movie, not the four-star production the 1935 film turned out to be (don’t be confused. Like the Super Bowl, the films of 1935 were up for the 1936 Oscars).
What’s interesting about watching Oscar-winning movies from the first Academy Awards in 1928 through the eighth in 1936 is how performances toned down so quickly from the overacting of the 1927’s Sunrise and even 1931’s Cimarron to the relatively realistic Gable and Laughton, just eight years later.
Film quality also improved: Sunrise was dark and softly fuzzy; Mutiny on the Bounty was an excellent black and white with sharp edges and realistic skin tones.
Trivia
Despite directing three men who received Oscar nominations, Frank Lloyd was nominated but lost to John Ford’s The Informer, which also grabbed the golden icon for Best Screenplay.
It wasn’t memorable year for movies. The other nomine es: Alice Adams, Broadway Melody of 1936, Captain Blood, David Copperfield, The Informer, Les Miserables, The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Naughty Marietta, Ruggles of Red Gap, and Top Hat.