Alone on the Pacific (1963)

  • Year: 1963
  • Released: 15 Apr 1964
  • Country: Japan
  • Adwords: 2 nominations
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057553/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/alone_on_the_pacific
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: Japanese, English
  • MPA Rating: N/A
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Runtime: 104 min
  • Writer: Kenichi Horie, Natto Wada
  • Director: Kon Ichikawa
  • Cast: Yûjirô Ishihara, Masayuki Mori, Kinuyo Tanaka
  • Keywords: based on memoir or autobiography, sailing, pacific ocean, yachtsman,
7.1/10

Alone on the Pacific Storyline

Kenichi Horie is determined to challenge his family, the law and the nature crossing the Pacific to America in a small sailboat. Despite his careful planning many unforeseen events will test his determination.

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720pweb887.12 MBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:6FD9E2D4FE9261E1B2D8028DC1CF9D68F25F285B
1080pweb1.61 GBmagnet:?xt=urn:btih:9B81FF417FDABF4C8BC8285D65EBA28047FC09C9

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Alone on the Pacific Movie Reviews

a study of isolation and achievement

A film about a lonely figure piloting his one-man sailboat across the wide expanse of the Pacific Ocean would seem to pose an insurmountable narrative logistical threat, but director Kon Ichikawa turns an unlikely true story into an unusual study of isolation and personal achievement. Ken-Ichi Horie was an obstinate amateur sailor obsessed with the challenge of a solo journey across the world’s largest ocean, and in 1962 he fulfilled his ambitions (succeeding almost in spite of himself) in a 92-day passage that proved to be less an ordeal than a comic misadventure. Using a choppy visual style and a claustrophobic wide-screen camera, Ichikawa shows the intrepid traveler at the mercy of both the elements and his own inexperience, ending with his anticlimactic arrival in San Francisco, victorious but asleep on his feet. The alternate title of the film was ‘My Enemy, the Sea’, a misnomer since, for all its impassive antagonism, the ocean was Horie’s only true friend, allowing him the freedom he never knew on land.

An epic odyssey

The theme of stubborn individualism has always run through Ichikawa’s work and it was not surprising that he wished to film this true story of an ordinary twenty-three year old who crossed the Pacific in a small yacht,a feat which no Japanese had ever accomplished.The hero is played by Yujiro Ishihara,a hugely popular star in youth movies who is utterly convincing in the role.It is the accumulation of small details which make the film so compellingly realistic:the daunting planning and purchase of items from three sets of screwdrivers to a meticulously controlled diet of canned foods,beer and water. He is subjected to all the ordeals which lone sailors speak of,namely,above all,the loneliness of each day,the sleep deprivation,the unforeseen accidents,and above all the vagaries of the weather,his small vessel unceasingly lashed by unforgiving storms,even the presence of a shark which almost catches him off guard having a swim. Throughout the film we see flashbacks to his rather humdrum existence working for his father and then for a travel agency,his bickering relationship with his father,his rejection of his mother’s endless pleas for him to stay at home.It seems as if the typically conformist pressures exerted by the Japanese family have in part driven him to find relief in the open seas. And when the end of the voyage comes,it is one of the most perfect and beautifully filmed climaxes in modern film history.