The Daily Telegraph

Doesn’t quite push the boat out

- Tim Robey FILM CRITIC

The Mercy 12A cert, 102 min

★★★★★ Dir James Marsh. Starring Colin Firth, Rachel Weisz, David Thewlis, Ken Stott, Jonathan Bailey, Andrew Buchan

The story of Donald Crowhurst, who set off solo from Teignmouth in October 1968 on an uninterrup­ted, eventually infamous, round-the-world yacht race, is extraordin­ary. For those who don’t know it yet, there’s a decision to be made, much as we have a choice in approachin­g, say, Othello for the first time: reading it, picking the right stage production or opting for the Olivier – or the Welles – film.

The Mercy is a full-scale adaptation, with a fairly lavish part-bbc budget, and big stars – Colin Firth as Crowhurst, Rachel Weisz as his wife Clare – giving it the prestige push. For starters, we get Firth’s best, most intent performanc­e of the past several years. Forget that the real-life Crowhurst was physically more of an Eddie Marsan type. This is a deep, intelligen­t portrait of a man with quixotic ideas of making his name, but whose soul frayed at sea. Some aspects of James Marsh’s direction work very nicely. He leans heavily on sound design – the clatter and creak of on-board equipment, the pounding of waves – to get us into the head space of a powerful isolation. Crowhurst spent nine months totally alone on his boat, soon abandoning hope of finishing the circumnavi­gation before his competitor­s, and at a certain, fateful stage, of finishing it at all.

A lot of meticulous research has clearly gone into Scott Z Burns’s script, especially in establishi­ng the external pressures that essentiall­y pushed Crowhurst out to sea, before he was satisfied with the capabiliti­es of his custom-built trimaran. He had bet the house on this endeavour – literally signing over property rights to his sponsor Stanley Best (Ken Stott) in the event that he defaulted. His press agent (a garrulous David Thewlis) eggs him on, right before departure, not to let doubts swallow him up, and there’s a sense of his fate being sealed by forces not wholly in his control.

All told, it’s hard to say why The

Mercy, which is completely respectabl­e and well-acted, doesn’t add up to the shattering experience that Crowhurst’s biopic ought to be. It has the bad luck to follow a documentar­y, a dozen years ago, on the same subject: Deep Water, a Film4-commission­ed 2006 account by Jerry Rothwell and Louise Osmond, which remains painfully moving, in part because of the contributi­ons from Crowhurst’s surviving family members, who broke their silence for the first time there.

There’s nothing in The Mercy to match the recollecti­ons of his son Simon, aged eight at the time, who remembers lying awake, scared, in choppy weather, the night before his dad set off. The filmmakers have even reduced his gaggle of children from four to three in this retelling, which feels a guaranteed way to alienate family support.

And their evident lack of involvemen­t unfortunat­ely makes itself felt: we’re at a glossy remove from the core emotions of the story.

Cinematogr­apher Éric Gautier, who did a great job on Into the Wild capturing Chris Mccandless’s trek into the Alaskan wilderness, bathes this too often in a rosy sunset glow: given the deepening despair of Crowhurst’s situation, it’s a good deal too pretty and packaged-seeming. The structural decisions – beyond-weak gimmicks such as an imaginary 11th-hour chat between husband and wife – are mainly pedestrian, too.

It’s no particular fault of Weisz’s that all the waiting around at home feels kind of arbitrary, a series of paddedout gestures to give her requisite screen time. And because we shuttle back and forth between Clare’s apprehensi­ons and Donald’s distress, the film squanders the purity of being a one-man-at-sea, Robert-redford-in

All-is-lost-type exercise. It should probably have picked one perspectiv­e on the story – even hers – rather than hedging its bets with both.

Through all the film’s bumps and scrapes, Firth does invest a lot of commendabl­e energy in helping us grasp Crowhurst’s besieged state of mind. It’s a good performanc­e in shaky circumstan­ces, but at least he honours the man’s contradict­ions, as well as his terror of public failure, and even greater one of exposure as a fraud.

Crowhurst mentioned “the sin of concealmen­t” in his legendary logbooks – scrawled documents of a mind’s unravellin­g. The Mercy’s sins, on top of its genuine virtues, are more those of airbrushin­g. As such, it shouldn’t be anyone’s first port of call in getting to grips with the Crowhurst saga – there are several books about it, and there’s Deep Water. As a companion piece, though, it does the man no disgrace.

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 ??  ?? Companion piece: Colin Firth as Donald Crowhurst and Rachel Weisz, main, as his wife Clare with their children, waiting for news, in The Mercy
Companion piece: Colin Firth as Donald Crowhurst and Rachel Weisz, main, as his wife Clare with their children, waiting for news, in The Mercy

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