DEEP WATER is the stunning true story of the fateful voyage of Donald Crowhurst, an amateur yachtsman who enters the most daring nautical challenge ever ? the very first solo, non-stop, round-the-world boat race.
"This is a beautiful and completely compelling film; the story of the last voyage of Donald Crowhurst, a completely batty amateur of the finest British tradition, a man with a young family and a struggling business who becomes inexplicably fixated on an utterly forlorn quest to win the 1968 Sunday Times solo, non-stop round-the-world-yacht race.
Archive footage reveals that from the earliest stage Crowhurst, a tubby, cardigan-wearing thirty-seven-year-old inventor, had no idea what he was taking on (but at least he was dressed for it: in a tie and slacks as he set off on the race!), what he was doing, or how his plan had a hope of success, yet bizarrely he was financed, filmed, represented by people who ought to have known better, and most strangely of all allowed, even out of his garden shed, by his wife, a woman revealed by the documentary to be otherwise a sober, sensible, reflective and thoughful woman. One of many tragedies catalogued was that no-one had the wherewithal or gumption to tell this poor chap - in no sense one of life's winners, and certainly not the sort to be up for a round-the-world solo yacht journey - not to be such a blazing fool.
Yet, like a Greek tragedy, plot developments thereafter pile inevitably on, compelling the poor man on when even he had twigged it was sheer madness: the oppressive terms of his financing, residual pride, his own ill-considered decisions to misreport his positions and, in the final strait, the sheer bad luck to have a couple of his competitors unexpectedly sink or go postal on him when all he needed them to do was simply complete the course ahead of him and allow him to finish in quiet, plucky British ignominy. Were it not for any of these, Donald Crowhurst might still have his unspectacular life, and still be running a failing electronics business, to this day.
But as it is, events conspired to a different course, and Crowhurst's elegaic and articulate descent into the abyss is capitvatingly rendered in this film, from logs, recordings and films he made en route, and in which he is portrayed without apparent exaggeration as a tragic hero, doomed by the course of this actions and the irresistable currents of human and physical nature, to a sad end.
Thoroughly recommended.
Olly Buxton"
An ordinary anti-hero
Daniel B. Clendenin | www.journeywithjesus.net | 09/19/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"In 1968 the Sunday Times of London sponsored a race to see who could circumnavigate the globe --solo and without stopping. Prizes were offered for the one who finished first and the one who finished fastest. Nine sailors entered the race, but this documentary film focuses on three contestants in particular-- Robin Knox-Johnston, who finished first by averaging 92 miles a day for 312 days (28,704 miles) and who appears in the film; the Frenchman Bernard Moitessier, who turned around just before finishing, forsaking fame and fortune for the isolation of the sea, and sailed an additional 10,000 miles to Tahiti (his book The Long Way tells his story); and then the amateur sailor and eccentric Donald Crowhurst who never should have entered the race under any circumstances. His bizarre story forms the real narrative of this film. It's difficult to say more without spoiling this film, but you can be sure that it's more of an exploration of the deep waters of the human psyche than an adventure tale. Interviews with family members and friends; archival film footage; news reels; diaries, audio tapes, 16mm film and ship logs by the sailors; and still photos lend authenticity to the pathos of this deeply human story. Two of the film's producers were John Smithson and Paul Trijbits who made Touching the Void."
Not for fans of the book
bp | USA | 01/01/2008
(3 out of 5 stars)
"If you're a fan of Tomalin and Hall's The Strange Last Voyage of Donald Crowhurst be aware that this documentary is a different sea tale altogether. Tomalin and Hall's book is a psychological portrait of a small town intellectual desperate for recognition and success. Deep Water, on the other hand, emphasizes Crowhurst's economic plight portraying him more flatteringly as a kind of dreamy anti-hero. Readers of the Tomalin book will like the tidbits of old film footage but may find Crowhurst's tale constrained by the nature of the film medium and the editorial accommodations likely made for family members who are interviewed throughout."
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea.
mirasreviews | McLean, VA USA | 12/30/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
""Deep Water" tells the strange story of Donald Crowhurst, an Englishman of limited sailing experience who was one of 9 men to take up the challenge issued by the Sunday Times in 1968: A non-stop single-handed boat race around the globe. There were doubts as to whether boat or human could withstand such an arduous, isolated journey. The first person to do it would win a Golden Globe. The fastest would win £5,000. Crowhurst was a struggling small businessman with a family who had never found the success he wanted from life. The opportunity for fame and prize money appealed to him. To get a sponsor to pay for his boat, Crowhurst staked all he had, including his house, on completing at least half of the race -a decision that would have bizarre and catastrophic consequences.
Crowhurst set sail in the 40-foot trimaran "Teignmouth Electron" on the date of the race deadline, October 31, 1968. The story of his voyage, his predicament, and surprising decisions is told through old 16mm movies taken on board the boat and interviews with son Simon and wife Clare Crowhurst, friend Ron Winspear, journalist Donald Kerr, and Ted Hynds, who was deputy to Crowhurst's dodgy press agent Rodney Hallworth. Competitors Robin Knox-Johnston and Bernard Moitessier provide an insider's perspective on the race, Moitessier in the form of films and logs, since he is deceased. Francoise Moitessier shares her husband's experience and her own. Along with Tilda Swinton's narration, they paint a compelling picture of this groundbreaking 10-month endurance test.
This is one of those rare documentaries that might suffer from spoilers, so I'll be vague. "Deep Water" superbly recreates Crowhurst's grave dilemma and his character which obliged him to cope as he did. It's fundamentally sympathetic to Crowhurst, more than I would have been, perhaps because those who knew him and were interviewed are understandably fond of the man. The filmmakers tactfully avoid saying that Crowhurst gambled the roof over his children's heads to satisfy his ego, and thereby became his own undoing. It also doesn't mention an obvious alternative which, in the end, Crowhurst failed to see. But between those two points, "Deep Water" is a penetrating and gripping account of a man trapped, almost literally, between the devil and the deep blue sea.
The DVD (IFC 2007): There are 4 featurettes and a theatrical trailer (2 min). "The Sailors' Stories" are text and interviews about the contestants. Alex Garozzo, Donald Crowhurst, Loick Fougeron, and John Ridgeway have brief text bios. Very worthwhile are interviews with Chay Blyth (5 min), Bill Leslie King (6 min), Robin Knox-Johnson (10 min) and with the widows of Bernard Moitessier (6 min) and Nigel Tetley (7 min). "The Journalists' Story" (11 min) recounts how the Sunday Times conceived of and reported the boat race, creating the story, not just reporting it, through interviews with journalists Murray Sayle and Philip Norman, editor Harold Evans, et al. "The Family's Story" (7 min) interviews wife Clare and 2 of the Crowhurst children about how they came to understand their father's actions. "The Abandoned Boat" uses some photos of the Teignmouth Electron to present 11 of Donald's audio recordings and some of his notes and diagrams. Subtitles are available for the film in English SDH and Spanish."
Best Documentary Ever Made!
Paul Meehan | Alexandria, VA USA | 02/15/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)
"1968. In the pre-GPS era, Briton Francis Chichester becomes the first person to sail single-handedly around the world, after a brief stop in Australia for repairs. His achievement inspires the London `Times' newspaper to sponsor a round-the-world yacht race which will challenge the world's best yachtsmen to go one better; to sail single-handedly around the world without stopping, and without assistance from any third party. Total Solitude for anything up to a year.
Using Chichester's achievement as a preface, this outstanding documentary chronicles the pre-race excitement and preparations, profiles the nine men who accept the challenge, then tells the story of the race itself, all the way to the haunting conclusion and its inspiring legacy. Although its principal focus is on Donald Crowhurst, the `dark horse' among a field of experienced and famous yachtsmen, the whole 90-minute story is one of risk, adventure, solitude, shipwreck, survival, deception, triumph, failure, eccentricity, descent into madness, and - tragically - crushing bereavement. To say any more would spoil the suspense; suffice it only to add that not all of the nine men finished, and not all survived.
Interviews with surviving personalities (including family members) combined with clips of archived footage and a well-timed and articulate narrative make this a very well-coordinated documentary, in fact, now the best I have ever seen. I've watched it four times in the last year, and find it's one of those rare tales that reveals something new each time. Only this last time, for instance, it struck me that - surprisingly - not a single American entered the race; all the contestants were Europeans (actually British and French), almost as though they were the last in that great line of continental adventurers in the tradition of Columbus, DaGama, Drake, Magellan, Tasman, Cook, and others. Then a poetic irony about the timing of this race struck me; in 1968-69, these last great adventurers from the Old World were setting out one last time to sail around it, just as the first adventurers from the New World were setting out away from it, toward the moon. With each viewing, though, I found myself haunted by man's inner heart of darkness, about which so much is disturbingly revealed in this gripping tale. And I found the last ten minutes to be heartbreaking. Don't make the mistake of watching this before you go to bed, as I did the first time around.
I'm just over 50, but I still wonder that in my lifetime we have seen the transition from self-dependence (using a sextant and knowing the stars), to the global inter-connectivity of GPS, weather radar, and advanced communications which now make such voyages almost unadventurous. I couldn't help feeling that these men had more in common with those heroes of centuries ago, than with the more recent mariners of today, who are their actual contemporaries.
Among the bonus features are logs and videos recovered from one sad, derelict vessel of a sailor who didn't make it, and recent short interviews with a real-life cast of characters from what will soon be a forgotten world, including post-scripts to those no longer with us, references to that old classic Anglo-French rivalry, and some of the eccentricities of a very special group of larger-than-life heroes and villains (look for the swashbuckling Scotsman who later became the first person to sail solo around the world in the wrong direction, not to mention the gallant Frenchman who abandoned fame and fortune to achieve self-fulfillment - right out of Saint-Exupery!).
Never mind if you're not a sailor - I'm not; this is about so much more than life on the high seas and the wild oceans. There's something in this for everyone, but especially those who want their heroes not to be country-men, or company-men, or men of any kind of institution, but men's men; individualists in the classic sense, whose strengths derive from something deep within.
This story continues to grow on me, and - significantly - on all those to whom I have recommended it. To explain in full why this documentary is so compelling and so good would spoil the show. So trust me far enough to spend $4 (used) for what in my humble opinion is the best documentary ever made. I am certain you will not regret it.