Three Crowns of the Sailor

1982 [FRENCH]

Action / Adventure / Drama / Fantasy

6
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 77% · 1 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 77% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.0/10 10 1212 1.2K

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Plot summary

Shortly after murdering his professor, a young man encounters a sailor who offers him a position on his ship in exchange for 3 Danish crowns and his attention as he recounts his life story.

Director

Top cast

Paula Brunet-Sancho as Moroccan streetwalker
Diogo Dória as The sailor's sister's fiancé
Geneviève Mnich as (voice)
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
1.05 GB
1280*964
French 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
25 fps
1 hr 57 min
Seeds ...
1.96 GB
1424*1072
French 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
25 fps
1 hr 57 min
Seeds 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by chaos-rampant

Sea of narratives, wrecked, sailing again

So my ongoing project is to seek out films that point towards a true perception, a way of seeing things as they are and why. If the image has power as a fragment of the consciousness it informs and is informed by, then in entering a film we literally see what another has seen or dreamed, imprinted with what he means by seeing whatever it is he sees.If this kind of film is rarely encountered, it's precisely because so many filmmakers see things in order to mean something else. Rarely do they mean what they see.Some of my most cherished filmmakers dismantle with clarity of vision the cluttered notions, ideas, meanings, we associate with those images so that only the image remains, along with what echoes it has stirred in us. This is akin to meditation for me, a process of emptying out.Another group of films I am drawn to use the opposite means, but look for the same. These assail our established notions (that things make sense a certain way) by fabricating other notions to confound or challenge that sense, by precisely cluttering their apparent order with various synthetic modes, symmetries or layered patterns. The idea here is that by losing ourselves in these stratagems, we awake to the activity of the mind that obscures the true picture. We look at things as through a kaleidoscope, not simply to enjoy the phantasmagoria, but so that we may become aware of that kaleidoscope that fractures the seeing.This one belongs in this company, next to Greenaway and Welles.So what we have here is another cunning web of stories within others, narrators within their selves projected into these stories. A sailor is recounting a story of sailing the High Seas to a young student, like in something Herman Melville might have written 150 years ago, or R.L. Stevenson.We stop at various ports in this voyage, where fragments of life are recounted as vignettes. Various commentaries can be found in these, each one an elaborate ploy that informs others in turn.In Singapore for example, the sailor meets with a local kid and the French proconsul. The proconsul translates what the kid says, but is he really? He says the kid is actually a wise old man, and that he must be kept from eating so that he won't grow old. In starving the kid, he posits that he's doing him a favour. The colonial commentary should be obvious, which Ruiz probably felt like he had inherited by working in France.In Dakar he's met with a black doctor, who asks money and tells him how the present moment is impregnated with all the other moments, past or yet to come. Elsewhere he is saved by a kid who claims that he is free to roam the territory of his parents yet, in not having discovered any borders to it, is strangely prisoner of that freedom. The kid points to books of Stevenson claiming he already knows the stories, and wants to live in the world, not the page.These fragments together comprise a kind of memoir, a mistress, wife, a kid. But again, how much of it true outside of the words? How much of it only a story the sailor picked up elsewhere and improvised some of his past upon it? We literally flow through these, like Welles would have the imagery; fluid motion, solid forms. Soaking up half-remembered atmospheres as thrown up by the imaginative mind. The mind which endlessly remembers, yearns, dreams, loathes, loves, talks with itself.It's a rather beautiful construct overall; a ship as vessel of the imagination sailing on inscrutable seas, where all the sailors aboard are dead (like memories, to be conveniently arranged) except one, with the ability to dream ship and voyage. Who comes back with stories from that voyage, stories that involve parts of himself real or imagined.This may had been an astonishing work if what reality anchored the imaginative flight could resonate inside the fantasy. On the level of reality there is the sailor narrating to the student; they are in a kind of ballroom and around them dance various couples. I wonder, will this mean to you what it does to me?
Reviewed by

Reviewed by XxEthanHuntxX 6 / 10

A VOYAGE ON THE SEA OF DREAMS

Raul Ruiz argues against the sort of dogmatic religion who is the religion of conflicts in filmmaking. He explores the idea of making film without any kind of conflicts. And making structures taken from poetry and from othe narrative structures who doesn't need conflicts. Raul gives more importance to elements that are supposed to be secondary, eliminating the narrative pyramid. Pushing and researching the dogmatic way of telling stories through cinema without being really experimental.

Raul Ruiz was trying to Inventing new ways of making films. He experimented with different kind of techniques and ideas to see what happends.

Three Crowns of the Sailor, is the second movie Ive seen from Raul and is definitely the best of the two in my personally opinion, thus it has a better lined up structured story.

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