The Sea Chase
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1955
- 117 min
- 76 Views
I remember when it began,
and where:
Sydney, Australia...
... the day Hitler rejected our ultimatum
to stay out of Poland.
I remember the ancient German freighter,
brooding at her moorings...
... coal bunkers and provision rooms
more than half empty...
... with the unsafe waters of two oceans
between her and home.
It wasn 't as though her rusty carcass
was worth much...
... or her men unexpendable.
She was an old lady
of the ocean backstreets...
... who should have drowned herself
gracefully long before.
So this is the story
... and a salute to a man for whom
the sea was a changeless way of life.
The story of a ship and a man...
... who became so much
a part of one another...
... that his heart was her power...
... his breath, her life...
... his stubbornness,
the steel of her sides.
I am Jeff Napier,
and I knew them both...
... back in the days before the world
took notice of them.
Before there was a story.
Her crew was of no credit
to any sea or land.
Their captain realized that, of course.
In later years, I sometimes
blamed myself...
... for making a challenge
of his problems.
But then, I knew that wasn 't
I knew it was something much deeper.
Not loyalty, which is what one may owe
to others, but integrity.
A man 's supreme obligation to himself.
That was a recording of Berlin 's reaction
to Herr Hitler's defiant rejection of...
Turn off that wireless!
On the well deck! Get back to work!
- Jeff.
- Karl.
- Good to see you again.
- Good to see you too.
Let's go up to my quarters.
- Make yourself at home, Jeff.
- Thanks.
From the heavy cruiser von Moltke
to the tramp steamer Ergenstrasse.
How's your father?
I heard he was made vice admiral.
Oh, he's as fit as a youngster.
Bellowing for a sea command.
I'm afraid he's slated for a desk
at the admiralty this war.
- And there's going to be war, Karl.
- There is.
And I'm slated for internment,
is that what you're trying to say?
Well, that's one thing.
I see you still carry
the old imperial flag.
I do.
Quite different from the one astern.
You won't get an argument
out of me on that.
Look, I'm Number One
of the Rockhampton.
We received orders this morning
to make ready to sail.
- On a war footing?
- Yes.
Within the week,
we'll be fighting Nazism.
Now, you've been fighting it since its
inception, and there are plenty like you.
Karl, before this thing breaks,
why don't you establish yourself as...
A traitor?
They took away my command.
Would you take away my homeland?
Sorry.
Well, don't think
I haven't considered it.
But the Rockhampton,
a crack vessel of the Royal Navy...
...certainly isn't wasting
its executive officer...
...to make a survey of the harmless old
Ergenstrasse, without cargo or coal...
...unable to sail.
No. It's Elsa.
- Elsa who?
- Elsa Keller.
I met her in Hamburg.
She's waiting in the car.
- I'd like you to meet her, Karl.
- Gladly.
Didn't I read sometime back
you were engaged to a girl in England?
the deuce to pay when I get back...
...but it'll have to be.
And this isn't just another girl
in Australia?
Let's don't keep her waiting.
I still keep something
for special occasions.
Good. Don't bother
to come any further.
Thank you.
You sent for me, sir?
Go over to our consulate fast.
Clear us for Yokohama just as we are.
Yokohama?
We can't make Yokohama, sir.
Go to our consulate.
Get into plain clothes.
With news the way it is,
I want no brawls.
Aye, aye, sir.
That's all right, Brounck. That's fine.
- Karl.
- Come in, come in.
Putting a chill on this.
Elsa, this is Captain Karl Ehrlich.
Karl, Miss Keller.
Miss Keller.
Haven't we met before?
I can't quite recall, but the navy
seems to be mixed up in it somehow.
No.
- He wouldn't have forgotten you.
- But I was in the navy.
- Won't you sit down.
- Thank you.
I recall now.
I was on the Riviera
when I heard the captain was...
Relieved of his command.
Yes.
against the new regime.
Until now, I didn't know
what happened to you, captain.
They didn't shoot me.
You know, my friendship with Karl
is a family matter...
...dating back a generation.
- Champagne, or should I freshen this?
- No, that'll do fine, thanks.
I have to report every four hours
to headquarters.
- Not aboard the ship.
- There's one on the next wharf.
- That'll do fine.
Do you mind if Elsa waits here
till I get back?
- Delighted.
- Well, don't be too delighted.
- I'll show you to the gangway.
- That's all right, I know the way.
It's as Jeff said.
I've known him since he was a boy,
which he still is, in some ways.
I don't know your entire history,
but I know enough.
So one of two things:
When he returns, either you tell him in
front of me or I tell him in front of you.
- Tell him what?
- About the Monte Carlo affair.
any attractive woman slightly.
There was the famous, or infamous,
cruise with Billy Norton.
Or the fact that Eric Carson shot himself
20 minutes before he was to marry you.
Merely gossip, captain.
Did you ever see a man
You don't come into this one way
or the other, except for plain meddling.
Keep out of it.
There's a third alternate.
You can leave, never see Jeff again.
Just fade out with no explanation.
No matter how long it takes,
I shall pay you back.
You have nothing now...
...but when I'm finished,
you won't even have this!
To what I promise you!
- Mr. Bachman.
- Yes, sir?
- What have you there?
- Explosives, sir.
- Explosives?
- Yes, sir.
Mr. Kirchner told me to plant them.
I was just coming to report.
They thought up a new one.
Crews of foreign ships are to be
medically examined before a clearance.
Our consul passed orders for us to
scuttle the minute we get news of war.
Take that stuff back
to the chief engineer.
- And don't go by the gangway.
- Yes, sir.
Get out of that shore gear,
get ready for sea.
I believe you're aware of my status
in Naval Intelligence.
I took the opportunity to ask the consul
to wireless home for further orders.
Possibly to fly me home.
Mr. Kirchner, we have not abandoned
this ship yet.
- Stemme.
- Sir.
You will go to the consul at once.
Pay him my respects
and inform him personally...
...that the weather forecast
Tell him I'll attempt to get out of Sydney
harbor tonight on my own responsibility...
...and shall so log it for his protection.
- Aye, aye, sir.
- Hurry it up.
- Yes, sir.
Your orders come through,
you'll be relieved of duty.
- Otherwise, you sail.
- We haven't a chance of getting out.
- You'll have to scuttle.
- You're mistaken, Mr. Kirchner.
That British officer
is in your quarters, sir.
Well. What happened?
- A little accident.
- What sort of an accident?
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"The Sea Chase" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_sea_chase_17664>.
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