Mare Nostrum


1h 50m 1926
Mare Nostrum

Brief Synopsis

In this silent film, a Spanish army captain falls for a German spy.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Drama
Romance
War
Release Date
Aug 29, 1926
Premiere Information
New York premiere: 15 Feb 1926
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Mare Nostrum by Vicente Blasco-Ibáñez (1918).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 50m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
11,000ft (11 reels)

Synopsis

Captain Ulysses Ferragut, the last of a famous Spanish family of seafaring fame, meets Freya Talberg, a beautiful and ruthless German spy, in Pompeii and falls in love with her. Freya's superiors plan to use Ulysses' knowledge of the Mediterranean to assist them in supplying their submarines with fuel, using Freya as bait. Later, Ulysses returns to Naples to find Freya and her spy ring departed, and he learns that his son Esteban, whom he idolizes, has been killed on a torpedoed liner. Seeking revenge for the death of his son and his own mistakes, he turns his ship, the Mare Nostrum, over to the French and volunteers as commander. Freya, disheartened by the results of her work, sends for Ulysses, but the memory of Esteban causes him to cast her off, and she is executed by the French for espionage. Ulysses' ship is torpedoed; and though he sinks, his attacker is itself swallowed up by the sea.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Drama
Romance
War
Release Date
Aug 29, 1926
Premiere Information
New York premiere: 15 Feb 1926
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Mare Nostrum by Vicente Blasco-Ibáñez (1918).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 50m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
11,000ft (11 reels)

Articles

Mare Nostrum


"Between Europe and Africa stretching from Gibraltar to the Syrian Coast, lies the Mediterranean, land-locked and tideless, known to the ancients as Mare Nostrum -- Our Sea...Upon its bosom mankind spread the first sail, from its depths the seagods were born." -- Opening titles for Mare Nostrum (1926).

Decades before David Lean invented the international spectacle with films like The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962), director Rex Ingram spanned three countries to produce this lavish love letter to the sea and his wife, Alice Terry. Released in 1926 and long thought lost, Mare Nostrum is one of the treasures of the silent cinema, a psychologically subtle, visually impressive anti-war story that was years ahead of its time as a thinking-person's film. Two very different experiences lay behind Ingram's creation of Mare Nostrum. He had scored one of his biggest successes with his adaptation of Spanish novelist Vicente Blasco Ibanez's The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in 1921. Ibanez's favorite novel, Mare Nostrum -- an epic tale of World War I espionage and naval battles told, like the earlier film, from Spain's neutral perspective -- seemed a natural choice for Ingram. But after years of fighting to make the best films he could, Ingram was also disgusted with Hollywood. In 1924 he had tried unsuccessfully to salvage his friend Erich von Stroheim's Greed (1924), only to see the studio cut the film into a pale shadow of the director's original vision. After one too many battles with MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer, he insisted that all of his films for the studio be billed as "Metro-Goldwyn" releases, refusing to credit Mayer at all.

Finally, he fled Hollywood in 1924, shooting The Arab (1924), with Ramon Novarro and Alice Terry, in Nice, France. For Mare Nostrum, he bought his own studio in Nice, the Victorine. Although it required extensive modernization, he got around that by including the costs within the budget paid by MGM, on proviso that he pay it back should he choose to purchase the studio for himself (he did, for $5 million, later renting the space to MGM at a high cost). He could get away with it, however, because with hits like The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, The Prisoner of Zenda (1922) and Scaramouche (1923) he was considered one of Hollywood's top directors.

Mare Nostrum gave him the chance to realize two other dreams. Terry had been begging him to help her break free from her typecasting as an ing¿e by giving her a femme fatale role. For his new film, she would be cast as a seductive German spy who seduces a noble sea captain (Antonio Moreno) from his wife in order to secure his services for the fatherland. And Ingram finally got to work with the gifted Spanish actor Moreno, who had been his first choice to play the lead in The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse. Ingram had been forced to use Rudolph Valentino instead so that writer-producer June Mathis would agree to his casting Terry in the female lead.

Everything about Mare Nostrum was big. It was shot in three countries -- France, Italy and Spain -- on such a massive scale that Ingram couldn't even direct the Spanish sequences himself. He handed them instead to cinematographer John F. Seitz. It took so long to make the film -- 15 months -- that Terry managed to complete two other pictures between the start of shooting and her first day on the set. Ingram secured two submarines (one captured from Germany during World War I) and a crew from the French Navy. He also enlisted the large group of White Russians living in the South of France to act as extras. For the climactic sinking of the submarine, he got them to perform numerous retakes of their plunge into the icy waters of the Mediterranean by giving them a shot of vodka each time they went in. They didn't feel the cold until they finally started sobering up, long after he'd finished shooting for the day.

But the foreign shoot had more than its set of problems. The glass-roofed studio became intolerably hot during the day and freezing cold at night, when most of the scenes were shot. The French, Italian and American technicians had trouble communicating, which created production delays. And the equipment kept breaking down. Ingram solved some of these problems when he plundered the Italian sets of Ben-Hur (1925), which MGM had just shut down (it would resume shooting in Hollywood), returning with equipment and new crew members. But he also had problems with the French labs, which ruined some sequences. As costs rose, he was forced to use model shots for some of the film's naval scenes.

In addition, Ingram shot much more film than he could have used -- over one million feet. After much editing, MGM came up with a version running just under two hours for its New York premiere, then cut it further to get a few more performances out of the picture. It would take years to put the film back to any semblance of Ingram's vision.

Even shortened, however, it was a critical triumph. Both Ibanez, who had been a frequent visitor to the set, and Terry declared it their favorite film, with Terry saying it was "the only film I ever did really." Although hard to find for years, it would have a huge influence on other filmmakers. Orson Welles drew on one sequence, a love scene between Terry and Moreno played in front of the octopus tank in an aquarium. In The Lady From Shanghai (1947), Rita Hayworth seduces Welles while in front of a tank in which one fish preys on another. British director Michael Powell, who worked on Mare Nostrum as a grip, would cite Ingram as one of the influences on his own visionary epics, including Black Narcissus (1947) and The Red Shoes (1948).

Ingram's own vision would not linger on screens much longer. He would only make three more films before declining box office and the difficulty of converting to sound while working independently made it impossible for him to continue. Terry would retire too, not even interested in pursuing "talking pictures." For her last film assignment, she worked as Ingram's assistant on his last film, Baroud (1933), in which he played the leading role.

Producer-Director: Rex Ingram
Screenplay: Willis Goldbeck
Based on the Novel by Vicente Blasco Ibanez
Cinematography: John F. Seitz
Art Direction: Ben Carre, Rex Ingram
Principal Cast: Alice Terry (Freya Talberg), Antonio Moreno (Ulysses Ferragut), Mickey Brantford (Esteban Ferragut), Mlle. Kithnou (Dona Cinta), Apollon Uni (The Triton), Hughie Mack (Caragol), Madame Paquerette (Dr. Fedelmann), Andre von Engelman (Submarine Commander), Kada-Abd-el-Kader (Young Ulysses).
BW-102m.

by Frank Miller
Mare Nostrum

Mare Nostrum

"Between Europe and Africa stretching from Gibraltar to the Syrian Coast, lies the Mediterranean, land-locked and tideless, known to the ancients as Mare Nostrum -- Our Sea...Upon its bosom mankind spread the first sail, from its depths the seagods were born." -- Opening titles for Mare Nostrum (1926). Decades before David Lean invented the international spectacle with films like The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962), director Rex Ingram spanned three countries to produce this lavish love letter to the sea and his wife, Alice Terry. Released in 1926 and long thought lost, Mare Nostrum is one of the treasures of the silent cinema, a psychologically subtle, visually impressive anti-war story that was years ahead of its time as a thinking-person's film. Two very different experiences lay behind Ingram's creation of Mare Nostrum. He had scored one of his biggest successes with his adaptation of Spanish novelist Vicente Blasco Ibanez's The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in 1921. Ibanez's favorite novel, Mare Nostrum -- an epic tale of World War I espionage and naval battles told, like the earlier film, from Spain's neutral perspective -- seemed a natural choice for Ingram. But after years of fighting to make the best films he could, Ingram was also disgusted with Hollywood. In 1924 he had tried unsuccessfully to salvage his friend Erich von Stroheim's Greed (1924), only to see the studio cut the film into a pale shadow of the director's original vision. After one too many battles with MGM studio head Louis B. Mayer, he insisted that all of his films for the studio be billed as "Metro-Goldwyn" releases, refusing to credit Mayer at all. Finally, he fled Hollywood in 1924, shooting The Arab (1924), with Ramon Novarro and Alice Terry, in Nice, France. For Mare Nostrum, he bought his own studio in Nice, the Victorine. Although it required extensive modernization, he got around that by including the costs within the budget paid by MGM, on proviso that he pay it back should he choose to purchase the studio for himself (he did, for $5 million, later renting the space to MGM at a high cost). He could get away with it, however, because with hits like The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, The Prisoner of Zenda (1922) and Scaramouche (1923) he was considered one of Hollywood's top directors. Mare Nostrum gave him the chance to realize two other dreams. Terry had been begging him to help her break free from her typecasting as an ing¿e by giving her a femme fatale role. For his new film, she would be cast as a seductive German spy who seduces a noble sea captain (Antonio Moreno) from his wife in order to secure his services for the fatherland. And Ingram finally got to work with the gifted Spanish actor Moreno, who had been his first choice to play the lead in The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse. Ingram had been forced to use Rudolph Valentino instead so that writer-producer June Mathis would agree to his casting Terry in the female lead. Everything about Mare Nostrum was big. It was shot in three countries -- France, Italy and Spain -- on such a massive scale that Ingram couldn't even direct the Spanish sequences himself. He handed them instead to cinematographer John F. Seitz. It took so long to make the film -- 15 months -- that Terry managed to complete two other pictures between the start of shooting and her first day on the set. Ingram secured two submarines (one captured from Germany during World War I) and a crew from the French Navy. He also enlisted the large group of White Russians living in the South of France to act as extras. For the climactic sinking of the submarine, he got them to perform numerous retakes of their plunge into the icy waters of the Mediterranean by giving them a shot of vodka each time they went in. They didn't feel the cold until they finally started sobering up, long after he'd finished shooting for the day. But the foreign shoot had more than its set of problems. The glass-roofed studio became intolerably hot during the day and freezing cold at night, when most of the scenes were shot. The French, Italian and American technicians had trouble communicating, which created production delays. And the equipment kept breaking down. Ingram solved some of these problems when he plundered the Italian sets of Ben-Hur (1925), which MGM had just shut down (it would resume shooting in Hollywood), returning with equipment and new crew members. But he also had problems with the French labs, which ruined some sequences. As costs rose, he was forced to use model shots for some of the film's naval scenes. In addition, Ingram shot much more film than he could have used -- over one million feet. After much editing, MGM came up with a version running just under two hours for its New York premiere, then cut it further to get a few more performances out of the picture. It would take years to put the film back to any semblance of Ingram's vision. Even shortened, however, it was a critical triumph. Both Ibanez, who had been a frequent visitor to the set, and Terry declared it their favorite film, with Terry saying it was "the only film I ever did really." Although hard to find for years, it would have a huge influence on other filmmakers. Orson Welles drew on one sequence, a love scene between Terry and Moreno played in front of the octopus tank in an aquarium. In The Lady From Shanghai (1947), Rita Hayworth seduces Welles while in front of a tank in which one fish preys on another. British director Michael Powell, who worked on Mare Nostrum as a grip, would cite Ingram as one of the influences on his own visionary epics, including Black Narcissus (1947) and The Red Shoes (1948). Ingram's own vision would not linger on screens much longer. He would only make three more films before declining box office and the difficulty of converting to sound while working independently made it impossible for him to continue. Terry would retire too, not even interested in pursuing "talking pictures." For her last film assignment, she worked as Ingram's assistant on his last film, Baroud (1933), in which he played the leading role. Producer-Director: Rex Ingram Screenplay: Willis Goldbeck Based on the Novel by Vicente Blasco Ibanez Cinematography: John F. Seitz Art Direction: Ben Carre, Rex Ingram Principal Cast: Alice Terry (Freya Talberg), Antonio Moreno (Ulysses Ferragut), Mickey Brantford (Esteban Ferragut), Mlle. Kithnou (Dona Cinta), Apollon Uni (The Triton), Hughie Mack (Caragol), Madame Paquerette (Dr. Fedelmann), Andre von Engelman (Submarine Commander), Kada-Abd-el-Kader (Young Ulysses). BW-102m. by Frank Miller

Quotes

Trivia

'Powell, Michael' worked as an apprentice on this film, a position secured for him by Harry Lachman.

Notes

Filmed on location in Spain and Italy and on the Mediterranean Sea.