Real romance precedes real heroism in The Finest Hours. A retro historical drama and Disnefied true-story of the greatest rescue in Coast Guard history, its tone is as extremely earnest as its story is death-defying.
The romance between Bernie & Miriam Webber defines almost the entire first reel, and a real romance it is: cute and sweet and genuine. Dates will love it, even if the rest of the movie rocks the boat with a perfect-storm disaster, notwithstanding a super happy ending.
The rescue is a doozy, told in parallel parts, that of the benighted ship’s crew fighting to extend the time before their half-vessel sinks into the icy Atlantic, and that of the dauntless Coast Guard crew defying death to reach them. Casey Affleck leads the former and Chris Pine the latter, two great actors more than capable of carrying the movie.
Movie fans who retain a taste for real-life drama and traditional values will find The Finest Hours a great movie, not just one about perhaps the greatest ocean rescue in history. It’s clearly the greatest movie rescue.
Chris Pine is an old-fashioned moviestar: traditionally handsome and decent, kind of a 21st century Gregory Peck, a leading man for a new generation. He plays Bernie Webber, Boatswain’s Mate First Class and the greatest enlistedman in US Coast Guard history.
Casey Affleck equally carries the movie as Ray Sybert, the engine room boss who rallied his crew, figured out how to deal with profound setbacks and led his men back to shore. Ben’s brother Casey is surely the more soulful Affleck.
Outstanding film, at once a period piece and an action-movie.