- Messages
- 17,217
- Location
- New York City
Ship of Fools from 1965 with Jose Ferrer, Heinz Ruhmann, Michael Dunn, Vivien Leigh, Lee Marvin and Werner Klemperer
Glocken: "Lowenthal, you are blind; you're absolutely blind! You can't see what's going on in front of your own face."
Lowenthal: "What do you mean? Ah, you mean this business about the Jews? You don't understand us. The German-Jew is something special. We are Germans first and Jews second. We have done so much for Germany; Germany has done so much for us. A little patience, a little good will; it works itself out."
[Glocken scoffs endearingly]
Lowenthal: "Huh, listen, there are nearly a million Jews in Germany. What are they going to do? Kill all of us?"
[Glocken looks frightened]
Set in the early 1930s, the ship in Ship of Fools, based on Katherine Anne Porter's popular 1962 novel, is a German passenger liner on its way from Veracruz to Germany.
Its stories are the usual soap opera tales of any passenger ship, but these take place under the shadow of an aborning Nazi Germany, resulting in a grippingly depressing series of vignettes interlaced with foreboding.
First class has the regular cross section of the rich and strivers, while steerage, on this ship, is packed with Spanish day laborers being forcibly returned from Cuba to Spain.
Knowing what post-war audiences knew, the parallels to the WWII refugee ships of unwanted Jews was painfully clear.
At the personal level, we meet a series of people including the ship's sad doctor, played by Oskar Werner, whose unhappy family life and heart trouble has caused him to "escape" to sea.
On this voyage, he meets an exiled-from-Cuba Spanish national and drug addict, played by Simone Signoret. These two lost souls find each other in what appears to be a doomed relationship.
Also on board is a wealthy, lonely middle-aged American widow, played by Vivian Leigh, who finds men who will sleep with her, but nothing more. It is a point painfully made clear to her by a disgruntled third officer played by Werner Klemperer.
Additionally, we meet a young couple, played by George Segal and Elizabeth Ashley, who have great sex, but pretty much fight about everything else. In the mix, too, is a Spanish dance troupe, which is really just a cover for a ship-board prostitution service - yup.
But the heart and soul of Ship of Fools is the forced propinquity of its few Jewish passengers, one, a nice salesman played by Heinz Ruhmann, with its strident Nazis, one in particular, played with pseudo-intellectual menace by Jose Ferrer.
Ferrer's and Ruhmann's performances, effectively serving as surrogates for the Nazis and the German Jews, respectively, are as powerful and meaningful today as ever, with Ruhmann's portrayal of a weary but hopeful Jew poignantly juxtaposed against Ferrer's fanaticism.
From which table one sits at to which berth one gets in a shared cabin, the tension between the Jews and Germans run high. The Nazis, just coming to power in Germany, are emboldened, while many of the Jews, as seen in the quote at the top, believe "this too will pass."
In a critical role is the little person actor (referred to in the movie as a dwarf) Michael Dunn who acts as the conscience of the story often awkwardly breaking the fourth wall, albeit with funny, satirical or insightful comments.
The cast in Ship of Fools is talented and impressive, which helps shepherd this soap opera over its bumpy parts, while giving more depth to what, even then, were off-the-shelf stories.
Director Stanley Kramer, though, somehow kept all the stories moving along at a good clip, while providing each member of this professional cast an opportunity to highlight his or her talents in several memorable scenes.
What makes Ship of Fools most memorable, though, is how deeply sad it is. Audiences in 1965, when the movie was released, like audiences today, knew that all this 1930s ideology and animosity would eventually result in the horror and carnage of the Holocaust and World War II.
Watching Ship of Fools, you can't help thinking, "if only it could have been stopped," but perhaps author Porter's title was referring to more than just this particular ship as many in the 1930s saw that the world was sailing into a cataclysm, but they were powerless to stop it.