Legend Of The Ocean

Not to be confused with the 1976 film, 1900
The Legend of 1900
Directed byGiuseppe Tornatore
Produced byFrancesco Tornatore
Screenplay byGiuseppe Tornatore
Based onNovecento
by Alessandro Baricco
Starring
Music byEnnio Morricone
CinematographyLajos Koltai
Edited byMassimo Quaglia
Sciarlò
Medusa Film
Distributed byMedusa Film
  • 28 October 1998
165 minutes (Original cut)
125 minutes[1]
CountryItaly
LanguageEnglish
French
Budget$9 million
Box office$259,127 (United States) $20.6 Million (2019 Re-release)

AMAN SINAYA: Legend of the Ocean Show Synopsis. In a typical fishing village, a storm is brewing Every time a storm nears, the oceans tumble and the skies rumble, seemingly reminding the villagers of a legendary tale where a promise to always protect the seas was made between the Gods and their ancestors.

The Legend of 1900 (Italian: La leggenda del pianista sull'oceano, 'The Legend of the Pianist on the Ocean') is a 1998 Italian drama film directed by Giuseppe Tornatore and starring Tim Roth, Pruitt Taylor Vince and Mélanie Thierry. It was Tornatore's first English-language film.[2] The film is inspired by Novecento, a monologue by Alessandro Baricco. The film was nominated for a variety of awards worldwide, winning several for its soundtrack.

Plot[edit]

The story is told in medias res as a series of flashbacks. Max Tooney, a musician, enters a secondhand music shop just before closing time, broke and badly in need of money. He has only a Conn trumpet, which he sells for less than he had hoped. Clearly torn at parting from his prized possession, he asks to play it one last time. The shopkeeper agrees, and as the musician plays, the shopkeeper immediately recognizes the song from a broken record matrix (master disc) he found inside a recently acquired secondhand piano. He asks who the piece is by, and Max tells him the story of 1900.

1900 was found abandoned on the four stacker ocean liner SS Virginian, a baby in a box, and likely the son of poor immigrants from steerage. Danny, a coal-man from the boiler room, is determined to raise the boy as his own. He names the boy Danny Boodman T. D. Lemon 1900 (a combination of his own name, an advertisement found on the box and the year he was born) and hides him from the ship's officers. A few years later Danny is killed in a workplace accident, and 1900 is forced to survive aboard the Virginian as an orphan. For many years, he travels back and forth across the Atlantic, keeping a low profile.

Water Myths And Legends

The boy shows a particular gift for music and eventually grows up and joins the ship's orchestra. He befriends Max in 1927, but never leaves the vessel. Apparently, the outside world is too 'big' for his imagination at this point. But he stays current with outside musical trends as passengers explain to him a new music trend or style, and he immediately picks it up and starts playing it for them.

His reputation as a pianist is so renowned that Jelly Roll Morton, of New Orleans jazz fame, on hearing of 1900's skill comes aboard to challenge him to a piano duel. After hearing Jelly Roll Morton's first tune, 1900 plays a piece so simple and well known ('Silent Night') that the self-proclaimed inventor of jazz feels mocked. As Morton becomes more determined to display his talent, he plays an impressive tune ('The Crave') that brings tears to 1900's eyes. 1900 calmly sits down at the piano and plays from memory the entire tune that Morton had just played. 1900's playing fails to impress the crowd until he plays an original piece ('Enduring Movement') of such virtuosity and superhuman speed that the metal piano strings become hot enough for 1900 to light a cigarette. He hands it to Morton, who has lost the duel.

A record producer, having heard of 1900's prowess, brings a primitive recording apparatus aboard and cuts a demo record of a 1900 original composition. The recorded music is created by 1900 as he gazes at a woman (The Girl) who has just boarded and whom he finds attractive. When 1900 hears the recording, he takes the master disc, offended at the prospect of anyone hearing the music without his having performed it live. He then tries to give the master to The Girl who inspired it, but is unable to and breaks the matrix into pieces.

The story flashes back to the mid-1940s periodically, as we see Max (who leaves the ship's orchestra in 1933) trying to lure 1900 out of the now-deserted hull of the ship. Having served as a hospital ship and transport in World War II, she is scheduled to be scuttled and sunk far offshore. Max manages to get aboard the ship with the recording 1900 made long ago and plays it, hoping to attract 1900's attention. When it does, Max attempts to convince 1900 to leave the ship. But he is too daunted by the size of the world. Feeling that his fate is tied to the ship, 1900 cannot bring himself to leave the only home he has known. Max feels useless that he couldn't save his friend.

The shopkeeper asks Max how the record got into the secondhand piano. Max indicates that he put it there, and the shopkeeper tells him that he wasn't so useless after all. Then, as Max is leaving the store, the shopkeeper gives him the trumpet and says, 'A good story is worth more than an old trumpet,' and Max walks out as another customer walks in.

Cast[edit]

Legend Of Heroes Ocean

  • Tim Roth as 1900 (Danny Boodman T.D. Lemon 1900)
    • Roman Kuznietcov as 2 year-old 1900
      • Easton Gage as 4-year-old 1900
        • Cory Buck as 8-year-old 1900
  • Pruitt Taylor Vince as Max Tooney
  • Mélanie Thierry as The Girl
  • Bill Nunn as Danny
  • Clarence Williams III as Jelly Roll Morton
  • Peter Vaughan as The Shopkeeper
  • Niall O'Brien as Harbor Master
  • Gabriele Lavia as Farmer
  • Sidney Cole as Musician
  • Harry Ditson as Captain Smith
  • Adrian McCourt
  • Eamon Geoghegan

Reception[edit]

The Legend of 1900 received mixed critical reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 54% based on 41 reviews.[3] On Metacritic, the film has a 58/100 rating based on 28 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[4] On 15 November 2019 the film was given a wide release in China and made 130 million yuan (the equivalent of about $18.4 million) in its first two weeks.[5]

Accolades[edit]

Legend Of The Ocean
YearGoverning bodyAwardNominee and category[6]Result
1999CamerimageGolden FrogLajos Koltai for Best CinematographyLost to Elizabeth[7]
David di DonatelloDavidLajos Koltai for Best CinematographyWon
Maurizio Millenotti for Best Costume DesignWon
Giuseppe Tornatore for Best DirectorWon
Ennio Morricone for Best MusicWon
Francesco Frigeri for Best Production DesignWon
Best FilmLost to Fuori Dal Mondo[8]
Best ScreenplayLost to Fuori Dal Mondo
Scholars Jury DavidGiuseppe TornatoreWon
European Film AwardsEuropean Film AwardLajos Koltai for Best Cinematographer (also for Sunshine)Won
Italian National Syndicate of Film JournalistsNastro d'ArgentoMaurizio Millenotti for Best Costume DesignWon
Giuseppe Tornatore for Best DirectorWon
Best ProducerWon
Francesco Frigeri for Best Production DesignWon
Giuseppe Tornatore for Best ScreenplayWon
Nastro d'Argento SpecialeEnnio Morricone for the musical research for composing the movie's original scoreWon
2000Golden GlobesGolden Globe AwardEnnio Morricone for Best Original Score - Motion PictureWon
Guild of German Art House CinemasGuild Film Award - SilverGiuseppe Tornatore for Foreign FilmWon
Satellite AwardsGolden Satellite AwardFrancesco Frigeri and Bruno Cesari for Best Art Direction, Production DesignLost to Sleepy Hollow[9]
Ennio Morricone for Best Original ScoreLost to Sleepy Hollow

References[edit]

  1. ^'The Legend of 1900 '. British Board of Film Classification. 21 October 1999. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  2. ^The Legend of 1900 at mediacircus.net
  3. ^'The Legend of 1900 (1998)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  4. ^'The Legend of 1900 Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  5. ^'Why a forgotten 21-year-old film flop has taken Chinese cinema by storm and made millions'. South China Morning Post. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  6. ^'Awards for The Legend of 1900'. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  7. ^'Camerimage: 1999'. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  8. ^'David di Donatello Awards: 1999'. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 4 September 2008.
  9. ^'Satellite Awards: 2000'. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 4 September 2008.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Legend of 1900
  • The Legend of 1900 on IMDb
  • The Legend of 1900 at Box Office Mojo
  • The Legend of 1900 at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Legend of 1900 at Metacritic
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Legend_of_1900&oldid=934099007'
The Legend of Heroes III: Song of the Ocean
Developer(s)Nihon Falcom
Publisher(s)Namco Bandai Games
SeriesThe Legend of Heroes
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, PlayStation Portable
ReleaseWindowsPlayStation Portable
  • JP: January 12, 2006
  • NA: January 23, 2007
Genre(s)Role-playing game
Mode(s)Single player
Legend

The Legend of Heroes III: Song of the Ocean[a] is a role-playing video game originally developed by Nihon Falcom Corporation. It is the fifth game in The Legend of Heroes series, and the third and final title in the 'Gagharv Trilogy.' It was originally released for Microsoft Windows in 1999 and was remade for PlayStation Portable in 2006.

Plot[edit]

This takes place in Weltluna, the third realm in Gagharv, seven years after 'A Tear of Vermillion' and forty-nine years before 'Moonlight Witch'. It centers around Forte, Una and McBain and their quest in seeking Leone's Resonance Stones.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Known in Japan as Eiyū Densetsu V Umi no Oriuta (英雄伝説V 海の檻歌, lit. The Legend of Heroes V: A Cagesong of the Ocean)

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Legend_of_Heroes_III:_Song_of_the_Ocean&oldid=913436732'