9/10
An Actual Destroyer Sonarman's Review
9 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I served for six years as a destroyer sonarman in the early to late 70's hunting the Great Steel Whales and actually found seven confirmed Soviet subs in a time when most ping-jockeys like me never found any. My list of confirmed subs were 2 Foxtrot-class diesel boats, 1 November SSN, 2 Echo II SSGNs, 1 Victor I SSN and 1 Yankee SSBN. I just watched this film on TCM for the first time in many years and was struck by how realistic and relevant it still is. As one reviewer pointed out, the film echoes a true incident involving a US Diesel sub trapped in Soviet territorial waters in 1958 that is also spotlighted in the book, "Blind Man's Bluff". My watch station was similar to Wally Cox's character standing sonar watches and my battle station was firing the Underwater Weapons Battery like James McArthur's character. So I'm VERY familiar with both the attraction AND danger of the Ultimate Hunt of the Leviathan.

Many comparisons have been made of this film to Moby Dick and Widmark's Capt. Finlander to Ahab, including how Finlander, like Ahab, inspired his crew to go along with his doomed hunt. For me, I compare Finlander to Robert Mitchum's Destroyer captain in "The Enemy Below". Both are tough, tenacious captains who drive their crews to the limit of endurance in pursuit of their submerged adversaries. Both have compelling reasons for engaging in that behavior. The difference is Finlander's ultimate obsession with the hunt dooms him and his ship like Ahab, while Mitchum's captain is ultimately redeemed by his rescue of his enemies' lives even while his ship is destroyed in destroying the submarine.

The other compelling character for me is the former U-boat Captain who corrects Poitier's reporter that it was Admiral Doenitz's Navy, not Hitler's. This I find especially relevant since Doenitz actually had Admiral Lockwood, commander of the US submarine force in the Pacific during WW2, testify in his defense during Doenitz's war crimes trial since Lockwood used the exact same strategy to defeat Japan that Doenitz used against the Allies. To me, he also presages Jurgen Prochnow's U-Boat captain in "Das Boot".

Add in a great supporting cast that includes Martin Balsam and a young Donald Sutherland as one of the Corpsmen working under Balsam, the use of a Farragut-class DLG model and special effects that recreate the North Atlantic coast of Greenland quite effectively for it's time, and the constant drumbeat of the sonar transmission and echo that serves to heighten the tension even more and you have a great yarn. I've know many sub sailors who've had to endure being lashed with that sonar for hours to days at a time and told me how maddening that can get.

Strangely enough, I ran into one of the crewmen from one of the Foxtrot subs I found and tracked over 20 years later when he towed my car home from Burbank Airport to Pasadena. At that time, they had just brought another Foxtrot sub called the Scorpion and had her on display next to the Queen Mary in Long Beach. I asked him if he'd ever been down there to go aboard for old times sake. his answer was No because he LIVED it for three years and had his bellyfull of it THEN.
13 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed