It's very obvious that a lot of BoT was derivative of The Enemy Below, especially the enemy trio of honorable captain, loyal old comrade in arms, and ideologue younger officer. But there are a some differences, too; the Mitchum character, for instance, is a new captain, a reservist and former merchant skipper, whom the crew does not know or yet trust. He also has a personal motivation and can seem a little obsessive about hunting the U-boat. And the ending...
True, though they are new acquaintances and their major conversation scene is mostly getting to know each other.
The Enemy Below is currently available for streaming on Netflix and Amazon Prime, if anyone is interested.
RE: The Enemy below.
I was always struck at the relationship between Captain Murrell (Robert Mitchum) and the ship's doctor. Their conversations reminded me of those between Kirk and McCoy.
True, though they are new acquaintances and their major conversation scene is mostly getting to know each other.
I'm trying to remember. If the last scene was of the U-boat commander on his bridge saluting the destroyer Captain as the U-boat went down. I think that the U-boat Commander was played by Curt Jurgens. Kind of reminiscent of the final scene of BOT where the Romulan Commander tells Kirk "In another time and place, we could have called each other friends."
Yes, it's Curd Jurgens. In the movie, the escort is torpedoed and heavily damaged in its final battle with the U-boat. Mitchum stops his ship and has fires built on deck so the U-boat thinks she's finished. The submarine surfaces and signals he will give five minutes, and the Americans start to abandon ship. Then as the submarine closes in, Mitchum orders open fire, and the U-boat is hit several times. Getting underway again, Mitchum and what's left of the crew ram the submarine, breaking her back and locking the two vessels together. Jurgens orders abandon ship and they set destruction charges. Everyone abandons ship except for Mitchum, who then sees the German captain on the deck of the submarine. Jurgens sees him and salutes. Mitchum returns the salute, then sees that the other captain is trying to help his seriously wounded engineer, his old comrade. Instead of jumping for the boat, Mitchum throws a line to the submarine and helps Jurgens get his friend to the deck of the escort. Then Jurgens climbs the rope himself. Meanwhile, the exec (David Hedison) sees what is going on and pulls his boat back alongside, and some of the crew and some rescued Germans go back aboard to help. They all get back in the whaleboat and it pulls away, and they watch as the charges detonate and both vessels go down. The next scene they are aboard a US destroyer, where the Americans stand respectfully as the German prisoners in borrowed clothes conduct a burial at sea for the engineer. The doctor tells Mitchum that amidst all the destruction of war, what he saw in their rescue efforts actually gave him hope. Jurgens goes back to the fantail and looks out to sea. Mitchum goes up to him and offers him a cigarette. They say something like:
Jurgens: I should have died many times, but somehow I keep living. This time, it was your fault.
Mitchum: I didn't know. Maybe next time I won't throw you a rope.
Jurgens: I think you will.
THE END.
Jurgens: I should have died many times, but somehow I keep living. This time, it was your fault.
Mitchum: I didn't know. Maybe next time I won't throw you a rope.
Jurgens: I think you will.
THE END.
The Enemy Below is currently available for streaming on Netflix and Amazon Prime, if anyone is interested.