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The Sea Hawk
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The Sea Hawk (1940) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.7/10   3,227 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 2% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Howard Koch (screenplay) and
Seton I. Miller (screenplay)
Contact:
View company contact information for The Sea Hawk on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
1 July 1940 (USA) more
Tagline:
Dashing . . . romantic . . . Errol Flynn at his thrilling best! more
Plot:
Geoffrey Thorpe is an adventurous and dashing pirate, who feels that he should pirate the Spanish ships for the good of England... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
Nominated for 4 Oscars. more
NewsDesk:
(3 articles)
Philip French's screen legends
 (From The Guardian - Film News. 6 December 2009, 4:20 PM, PST)

A Career-Spanning Conversation with Joe Dante
 (From Fangoria. 11 October 2009, 4:32 PM, PDT)

User Reviews:
Excellent film! more (49 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Errol Flynn ... Captain Geoffrey Thorpe

Brenda Marshall ... Doña Maria Alvarez de Cordoba

Claude Rains ... Don José Alvarez de Cordoba
Donald Crisp ... Admiral Sir John Burleson
Flora Robson ... Queen Elizabeth
Alan Hale ... Carl Pitt
Henry Daniell ... Lord Wolfingham
Una O'Connor ... Miss Marthe Latham
James Stephenson ... Abbott
Gilbert Roland ... Captain Lopez
William Lundigan ... Danny Logan
Julien Mitchell ... Oliver Scott
Montagu Love ... King Phillip II
J.M. Kerrigan ... Eli Matson
David Bruce ... Martin Burke
Clifford Brooke ... William Tuttle
Clyde Cook ... Walter Boggs
Fritz Leiber ... Inquisitor
Ellis Irving ... Monty Preston
Francis McDonald ... Samuel Kroner
Pedro de Cordoba ... Captain Mendoza
Ian Keith ... Peralta
Jack La Rue ... Lieutenant Ortega (as Jack LaRue)
Halliwell Hobbes ... Astronomer
Alec Craig ... Judocus Hondins - The chartmaker
Victor Varconi ... General Aguirre
Robert Warwick ... Captain Frobisher
Harry Cording ... Slavemaster
rest of cast listed alphabetically:

Herbert Anderson ... Eph Winters (uncredited)
Mary Anderson ... Maid of Honor (uncredited)
Whit Bissell ... Gate guard at Palace entrance (uncredited)
Edgar Buchanan ... Ben Rollins (uncredited)
J.W. Cody ... Whipper (uncredited)
Maurice Costello ... Man Carrying Spear (uncredited)
Michael Harvey ... Sea Hawk (uncredited)
Leyland Hodgson ... Officer (uncredited)
Charles Irwin ... Arnold Cross (uncredited)
Dave Kashner ... Whipper (uncredited)
Colin Kenny ... Officer (uncredited)
Crauford Kent ... Lieutenant (uncredited)
Frank Lackteen ... Captain Ortiz (uncredited)
Lester Matthews ... Guard Officer (uncredited)
Art Miles ... Drum beater (uncredited)

Gerald Mohr ... Spanish Messenger (uncredited)
Leonard Mudie ... Castle Sentry (uncredited)
Nestor Paiva ... Slavemaster (uncredited)
Elizabeth Sifton ... Maid of Honor (uncredited)
Harry Silversmith ... Native (uncredited)
John Sutton ... Captain of the Guard (uncredited)
David Thursby ... Driver (uncredited)

Anthony Warde ... Whipper (uncredited)
Frank Wilcox ... Martin Barrett (uncredited)
Frederick Worlock ... Darnell (uncredited)
Harry Worth ... Spanish Officer (uncredited)
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Directed by
Michael Curtiz 
 
Writing credits
Howard Koch (screenplay) and
Seton I. Miller (screenplay)

Produced by
Henry Blanke .... associate producer
Hal B. Wallis .... executive producer
 
Original Music by
Erich Wolfgang Korngold 
 
Cinematography by
Sol Polito (director of photography)
 
Film Editing by
George Amy 
 
Art Direction by
Anton Grot 
 
Costume Design by
Orry-Kelly 
 
Makeup Department
Perc Westmore .... makeup artist
 
Production Management
Jack L. Warner .... in charge of production
Frank Mattison .... unit manager (uncredited)
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Jack Sullivan .... assistant director (uncredited)
 
Art Department
Leo K. Kuter .... assistant art director (uncredited)
 
Sound Department
Francis J. Scheid .... sound
 
Special Effects by
Byron Haskin .... special effects
Hans F. Koenekamp .... special effects (as H.F. Koenekamp)
 
Stunts
Ned Davenport .... fencing double (uncredited)
Ralph Faulkner .... fencing double (uncredited)
Harry Froboess .... stunts (uncredited)
Don Turner .... stunts (uncredited)
Buster Wiles .... stunts (uncredited)
 
Music Department
Leo F. Forbstein .... musical director
Hugo Friedhofer .... orchestrator
Ray Heindorf .... orchestrator
Howard Koch .... lyricist: songs
Milan Roder .... orchestrator
Simon Bucharoff .... orchestrator (uncredited)
 
Other crew
Jo Graham .... dialogue director
Ali Hubert .... technical advisor
William Kiel .... technical advisor
Thomas Manners .... technical advisor
Fred Cavens .... fencing master (uncredited)
Ralph Faulkner .... fight choreographer (uncredited)
Robert Foulk .... dialogue director (uncredited)
Georg Rothkegel .... german version dubbing director/german dialogue 1949 (uncredited)
 
Crew verified as complete


Production CompaniesDistributorsOther Companies
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Beggars of the Sea (USA) (working title)
more
Runtime:
109 min (re-release) | 127 min (original version)
Country:
Language:
Color:
Black and White | Black and White (Sepiatone) (some sequences)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Filming Locations:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Finnish censorship visa # 23684 delivered on 4-8-2005 (DVD) more
Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: Captain Ortiz opens a door towards the end of the movie when he is running away from Thorpe and a string is visible, attached to the door. A sword slides down the string to give the impression that it is thrown at Ortiz and barely misses him. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
King Philip II: The riches of the New World are limitless, and the New World is ours - with our ships carrying the Spanish flag on seven seas, our armies sweeping over Africa, the Near East, and the Far West; invincible everywhere... but on our own doorstep. Only northern Europe holds out against us; why? Tell me, why?
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Peeks at Hollywood (1945) more
Soundtrack:
Old Spanish Song more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
30 out of 32 people found the following review useful.
Excellent film!, 11 May 2004
8/10
Author: Coventry from the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls

I'm always up for some good, old-fashioned swashbuckler fun, and The Sea Hawk is one of the most amusing entries in that field. Directed by specialist Michael Curtiz and starring the legendary Errol Flynn. They previously worked together on `Captain Blood', the film that started the trend of popular sea adventures. Even though Captain Blood has a lot more range and features more plot-diversity, The Sea Hawk definitely is more spectacular and the swordfight sequences are far more exciting. The cinematography on this action sequences has seemly improved in the period between the two films. Errol Flynn portrays Geoffrey Thorpe, captain of the Albatross. He's a Sea Hawk and those privateers serve and protect the English Queen in their own particular way. The greedy King Phillip of Spain has set his mind to conquering Britain as well and to cover up his plans, he politely sends an ambassador to meet the Queen. However, Captain Thorpe and his crew boycott the Spanish and they righteously foresee a war between the two nations. Things are getting even more complicated when some prominent members of the British counsel turn out to be betrayers and – of course – Capt. Thorpe falls in love with the beautiful niece of the Spanish ambassador.

Errol Flynn clearly developed more charisma over the years and he already looks a lot more believable in his role of privateer now. He's excellently supported by Alan Hale who plays his first crewmember, Mr. Pitt. Flora Robson seems to make a career out of playing Queen Elizabeth's look-alike, since it already is the third film in which she plays this role. The best actor in the cast (even beating Errol Flynn) obviously is Claude Rains with in his terrific role of the vicious Spanish ambassador. The Galleons (both the Spanish as the British) look great and some historical aspects (like slavery and inquisition) are greatly included. The Sea Hawk is excellent, well-made fun and a must for all the nostalgic movie lovers.

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