In the Heart of the Sea review: they messed with the wrong whale

Amid all the swashbuckling, derring-do and mild ecological messages, Ron Howard delivers a delightfully old-fashioned high-seas adventure

This week on The Irish Times Film Show we gear up for the St Stephen's Day releases with reviews of Ron Howard's 'In The Heart Of The Sea' and 'Daddy's Home', starring Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg. Video: Daniel O'Connor
In the Heart of the Sea
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Director: Ron Howard
Cert: 12A
Genre: Adventure
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Benjamin Walker, Cillian Murphy, Tom Holland, Ben Whishaw, Brendan Gleeson
Running Time: 2 hrs 1 mins

It's 1850 and budding novelist Herman Melville (Ben Whishaw) has arrived at an inn belonging to Thomas Nickerson (Brendan Gleeson), the last surviving crewman of the whaling ship Essex. Nickerson proceeds with a tale that is as catastrophic as it is swashbuckling. As a 14-year-old tearaway, he boarded the ill-starred vessel. The Nantucket whaling industry was at the peak of its economic powers, replete with makeshift stock exchange and venture capitalists. To keep up with the demand for whale oil, boats were travelling further and further into increasingly treacherous waters, often for years at a time. The Essex would be no different.

The voyage would, however, be characterised by the high tensions between a privileged inexperienced young captain (Benjamin Walker, channelling the movieverse’s mean-spirited interpretation of Captain Blyth) and his first mate, the heroic veteran whaler Owen Chase (Chris Hemsworth makes with the derring-do). Relations improve after Chase’s first kill brings in a decent haul of oil. But then they mess with the wrong whale.

There are many pleasures to be derived from Ron Howard's adaptation of In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex, the award-winning historical chronicle by Nathaniel Philbrick. In common with Moby Dick - the epic novel that was inspired by the events depicted here - it might reasonably be argued that the vengeful white sperm whale who picks off the sailors, one by one, is actually the movie's hero. The scenes depicting whaling are, in fact, as horrific as the terrible fates visited, respectively, on the Essex's crew.

There are fascinating historical details and ecological warnings to be gleaned but, at heart, this is a delightfully old-fashioned high seas adventure. Unsurprisingly, Howard and regular DOP Anthony Dod Mantle fashion some spectacular images and the terrific ensemble acquit themselves with aplomb.

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- In the Heart of the Sea opens nationwide on December 26th

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic