The book
of the film, as they say, took Bach eight years to complete.
He
maintains that the story came to him in a vision.
"I
was walking home one night in 1959. I heard a voice say 'Jonathan Livingston
Seagull.' I was scared to death and ran home, locking the door behind me,"
said Bach.
"As I
sat on the bed a bright vision of a seagull flying alone suddenly appeared. The
bird started talking about his life.
"I
wrote down every word he told me. Then he disappeared.
"I
thought I had a great story to write. But I realised I only had half of it. I
could not finish it.
"It
was eight years before the seagull returned and talked to me again. I got the
rest of the story, dug out the old manuscript and finished the book."
Interview with Richard Bach, in Daily Mail (London), 17 January 1973
It
was during the late 1970s as a university undergraduate zoology student when I
first read Richard Bach's bestselling short novella Jonathan Livingston Seagull, originally published in 1970, followed
three years later by a movie version. The novella was truly magical and
inspirational, greatly influencing my outlook on life ever afterwards, and I
have re-read it many times since then.
My original
copy of Richard Bach's bestselling novel Jonathan
Livingston Seagull (Pan paperback edition, 12th printing, 1976) (© Richard
Bach/Pan Books - reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis
for educational/review purposes only)
Yet
until last night I had never seen the movie version, due not only to it being
released several years before I'd read the book but also to it being neither a
box-office nor a critical success and consequently sinking without trace
afterwards. Many years later, I happened upon this long-forgotten film in VHS
videocassette format, which I duly purchased, but although I fully intended to
watch it, somehow I never did - probably put off by the negative reviews that
it had received when released - until last night, and what a revelation it
proved to be.
My VHS
videocassette of the 1973 movie version of Jonathan
Livingston Seagull (© Hall Bartlett/Paramount Pictures - reproduced here on
a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
Live-action
throughout, the movie stays close both in content and in style to the book,
telling the story of a gull named Jonathan Livingston Seagull who is not
content simply to be one of the flock, to be satisfied with mediocrity,
suppressed by conformity, and never to exhibit any trace of individuality.
Instead, fascinated with flight, he pushes himself both physically and
spiritually to fly ever faster and soar ever higher, to see the whole world,
not just the very limited portion of it occupied by his flock. Unfortunately,
however, this does not endear him to the flock's Elders, who initially issue
him with stern warnings to conform, not to stand out from his fellow gulls,
but, when Jonathan chooses to ignore them in his Olympianesque quest to be
faster, higher, without equal, formally banish him from the flock forever, an
outcast alone and unprotected thereafter - but also free at last to pursue his
goals, his dreams, his ambitions, unhindered and unsuppressed.
After
travelling to parts of the globe never visited by other seagulls, such as deserts
and snowy forests, and surpassing all of his previous speed and altitude
records, in the movie's second half Jonathan is visited by some radiant, shimmering-white
gulls from a higher plane of existence, semi-divine and capable of flying feats
far exceeding even his own awesome abilities, but who are nonetheless very impressed
by what he has achieved and by his refusal to allow his individuality to be
denied by the flock. So they become his teachers, his mentors, enabling
Jonathan to achieve ever greater successes in his quest for perfection, until
eventually he in turn becomes a teacher, and with a small flock of acolytes, including
one particular protégé named Fletcher, he returns to his old flock and tries to
teach them what he has learnt. However, the repressive Elders are outraged and
command the flock to kill him and his followers. So they fly away, but not before
their words have incited in a few members of the flock a passion to discover
their own unique selves and uncover their own unique abilities.
The
cinematography of this very unusual yet truly evangelical movie, entirely
bereft of humans but featuring breathtaking footage of gulls both in flight
individually and gathering together in cacophonous bickering flocks to seize
fishes drawn up in trawlers' nets, is absolutely stunning even today, almost 50
years after this movie was first released, so just how incredibly spectacular
it must have looked on the big screen in its cinema release back in 1973 can
scarcely be imagined. And on top of all of this is an extremely evocative,
melodic soundtrack whose music and songs were written and performed by none
other than Neil Diamond, and which achieved commercial success worldwide following
its release in 1974.
The soundtrack
album from the movie version of Jonathan
Livingston Seagull, with all music and songs composed and performed by Neil
Diamond (© Neil Diamond/Columbia – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial
Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
With
so much going for it, what went wrong - why did this marvellous movie flop? To
my mind, the only tenable answer is that not a great deal happens in it - as can
be seen from my above précis of its plot, a plot that is as much metaphorical
as it is literal, just as it is in the book. Also, whereas the book is very short
(just 93 pages in total, and which include many full-page illustrations), there are rumours that the
movie was originally 120 minutes long, cut to 90 minutes in the video version
that I watched - but see also Adam Zanzie's comments challenging such rumours, posted below this review of mine. Yet regardless of its length, whereas I absolutely loved its beautiful panoramic shots,
exquisite scenery, and extremely tranquil ambience throughout, not to mention
its plot's inspirational theme and stirring music, to audiences more accustomed
to action and adventure movies it may conceivably have come across as uneventful to
the point of being dull. (Indeed, presumably fearing such an outcome, the
movie's makers insisted upon inserting a scene in which Jonathan is attacked by
a hawk for invading what the hawk considers to be its very own section of sky -
a scene that does not appear in the book and which Bach reputedly hated after seeing it.)
Yet
if this opinion of mine is indeed correct, it means that such audiences
entirely misunderstood what this magical film (and book) is all about. It is
NOT in any way, shape, or form a conventional animal movie, simply portraying
the adventures or life story of some cute creature. Instead, it is a glorious
pictorial paean to individuality – to be yourself, not subdued or repressed by
the strictures of society to conform, but instead to pursue your own dreams, to
create and follow your own pathway through life, ever striving to achieve your
own goals, neither hindered nor lured by mediocrity or mundanity. Dare to be
different, dare to be daring and uncaring of criticism or jealousy from those
who cannot or will not accept anything that challenges their rigid, inflexible status
quo, their blinkered worldview, their comfortable conservatism.
A lesser
black-backed gull Larus fuscus, the
species that Jonathan is portrayed as in the movie (Having said that, there is
one scene in which he briefly, inexplicably, changes between consecutive shots
from a lesser black-backed gull into a herring gull L. argentatus and then back into a lesser black-backed again – but
hey, what's a little interspecific interchange among friends!) (© Marek
Szczepanek-Wikipedia – CC BY-SA 4.0 licence)
Watching
this wonderful, life-affirming movie, I recalled so vividly how my mother Mary
Shuker had always encouraged me to embrace these very same ideals - to be
myself, to pursue what interested me, to dismiss those who sought to discredit
or denigrate my passions, possessions, and passage through life on my own terms
in my own way, and above all else, just as this movie and book also exhort, to dare
to be different. This probably explains why instead of spending a life of
tedium ticking boxes of conventionality and filling in the forms of conformity,
I can look back upon what for me has been an unconventional, non-conformist,
but thoroughly fascinating career in cryptozoology, with side-helpings of poetry,
world travel, and quizzing.
I
urge you to watch this movie if you can find it (sadly, it's not readily
accessible either in DVD or videocassette format nowadays, but maybe it can be
streamed?), and above all else to read the original book. It might just change
your life - it certainly changed mine.
An article
concerning this movie, published on 17 January 1973 by London's Daily Mail newspaper in one of the
scrapbooks that I used to compile as a youngster and which were the
predecessors of what became my ever-expanding archive of cryptozoology and
(un)natural history (© Daily Mail –
reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for
educational/review purposes only) – please click on image to enlarge for
reading purposes.
POSTSCRIPT
The
original novel consisted of three parts, each one concerned with a different
stage in Jonathan's personal voyage of discovery, but in 2014 it was
republished with a new, fourth part added, set 600 years after the previous
events and portraying a further dimension in the never-ending odyssey of his sublime,
immortal life. So I definitely need to read this now-complete edition, and once
again enable my soul to soar heavenward on the bright wings of a seabird who
dared.
Quotes
from Jonathan Livingston Seagull by
Richard Bach (© Richard Bach / image found online, © unknown to me – reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
It's true that Richard hates the hawk-attack scene, but he later admitted to me that he may have initially agreed to the hawk scene before he actually saw it. Also, I have not found anything to confirm that the initial cut of the film was 120 minutes long; that's just a rumor. Leslie Parrish has insisted to me that the preview version which was screened for her and Richard is the same version which was eventually released in theaters. Accounts of the lawsuit between Richard and director Hall Bartlett indicate that the judge ordered Bartlett to change some of the film's dialogue and music around... but that's it. I go into detail about all of this (and much more!) on the commentary track for the Imprint Blu-Ray, released worldwide in October 2020.
ReplyDeleteHi Adam, Thank you so much for your very interesting, informative3 comments, which I have now duly referred and linked to in my above review. All the best, Karl.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! If you're interested, the new Blu-Ray is now available on Amazon, and it's by far the best and most informative home video release of the film yet: https://www.amazon.com/Jonathan-Livingston-Seagull-Blu-ray-Richard/dp/B08GKY1CH3
ReplyDeleteSadly, I currently don't own a Blu-Ray player, but if I do purchase one in due course, I'll certainly look out for the Blu-Ray of this movie, which is unquestionably one of my all-time favourites - thanks for the alert!
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