In Search of the Castaways (film)


In Search of the Castaways is a 1962 Walt Disney Productions feature film starring Hayley Mills and Maurice Chevalier in a tale about a worldwide search for a shipwrecked sea captain. The film was directed by Robert Stevenson from a screenplay by Lowell S. Hawley freely based upon Jules Verne's 1868 adventure novel Captain Grant's Children.
In Search of the Castaways was Hayley Mills' third film in the series of six for the Disney Studios.

Plot

In England in the 19th century, Professor Paganel, a whimsical French geography professor, finds a bottle containing a note which he believes to have been written by the missing Captain John Grant. Paganel and Grant's two teenaged children, Mary and Robert, approach John Glenarvan and his father, the wealthy shipping magnate Lord Glenarvan, the owner of Captain Grant's ship, and persuade them to finance a search expedition. The expedition sets sail and ventures halfway around the world to South America.
In the Andes, an earthquake sends them down a mountain on a glacier. A giant condor snatches up Robert but Thalcave, an Indian chief, rescues him. He later claims to know the whereabouts of Captain Grant. After surviving a tidal wave and a lightning storm, the group discovers that the well-meaning Thalcave was mistaken. Meanwhile, a budding romance develops between young Mary Grant and Lord Glenarvan's son John.
They then depart for Australia, where Paganel feels sure they will find Captain Grant. In Melbourne they meet a treacherous gunrunner, Thomas Ayerton, who produces evidence that Captain Grant is in New Zealand. Unaware that Ayerton is the third mate who caused a mutiny on Grant's ship, the search party once more sets sail. Ayerton causes another mutiny and sets the group adrift. They are captured by Maori cannibals, and are imprisoned along with Captain Grant’s shipmate, Bill Gaye, who helps them escape to a volcano. They evade their pursuers by starting an avalanche which triggers off an eruption.
They finally find Captain Grant, overcome Ayerton and his mutineers, and sail for home. As they all sit around talking, the note that Professor Paganel initially found is brought up. Captain Grant states that he never wrote any note, to which Bill says: “The voice be the voice of a God-fearing man. But the hands are the hands of a forger”, implying that he imitated Captain Grant’s handwriting and wrote the note himself. In the final scene, the Professor points out John and Mary stargazing out at the railing, clearly falling for one another.

Cast and characters

The film was originally called The Castaways. It was devised by Disney specifically as a vehicle for Hayley Mills, who was under contract to the studio to make a film a year for five years. Disney wanted to age her gradually on screen and she would have her first case of "puppy love" in the film. Disney wanted Mills' brother Jonathan to play her brother on screen but his school teachers turned it down.
In April 1961 Disney announced they would make the film with Mills and Charles Laughton with Hugh Attool to produce and Robert Stevenson to direct. Maurice Chevalier then came on board with production to begin in June. The role of Mills' brother went to Keith Hamshere, who played Oliver on stage.
Laughton ended up dropping out of the film. He would be diagnosed with cancer in January 1962 which would kill him by December.
Filming took place in England at Pinewood Studios. Disney said this was done because Mills' contract "calls for alternating her pictures here and there each year."

Musical numbers

Songs composed by the Sherman Brothers include "Castaway", "Merci Beaucoup", "Let's Climb ", and "Enjoy It", with an orchestral arrangement of "Castaway" serving as the film's overture.
Maurice Chevalier later sang the Sherman Brothers' theme song 'The Aristocats' from Disney's 1970 animated film The Aristocats.

Reception

Box Office

In Search of the Castaways was a commercial success. The film grossed $18,415,385 domestically, and earned almost $10 million in theatrical rentals, becoming the 3rd highest-grossing film of 1962. At the worldwide box office, the film earned $21,745,500.
It was one of the 12 most popular movies at the British box office in 1963.

Critical

The New York Times declared, "It is, as we say, a whopping fable, more gimmicky than imaginative, but it doesn't lack for lively melodrama that is more innocent and wholesome than much of the stuff the children see these days on television."
A review in Variety said, "Walt Disney has come up with another splendid piece of spectacular hokum, lavishly colored and packed with incident and special effects. It can hardly fail to appeal to all types of audience, though apparently aimed mainly at the moppets."
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Well-timed for Christmas, this film is designed to keep the family wide-awake after the plum-pudding, when the critical faculties are not too sharp. Attention is discreetly drawn away from the rather cardboard characters, and the Fauntleroy smile of Michael Anderson, by a kaleidoscope of colour and movement."

Awards and nominations

The film placed third in the 1963 Golden Laurel Top Male Musical Performance and was nominated for the Golden Laurel Top Action Drama.

Other adaptations of Verne's novel

Verne's tale has seen two Russian film adaptations and a Spanish operetta.