The Sea Hawk

Dashing... romantic... Errol Flynn at his thrilling best!

7.1
19402h 7m

Production

Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

Dashing pirate Geoffrey Thorpe plunders Spanish ships for Queen Elizabeth I and falls in love with Dona Maria, a beautiful Spanish royal he captures.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Sea Hawk (1940) ORIGINAL TRAILER

The Sea Hawk (1940) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Cast

Photo of Errol Flynn

Errol Flynn

Captain Geoffrey Thorpe

Photo of Brenda Marshall

Brenda Marshall

Doña Maria Alvarez de Cordoba

Photo of Claude Rains

Claude Rains

Don José Alvarez de Cordoba

Photo of Donald Crisp

Donald Crisp

Admiral Sir John Burleson

Photo of Flora Robson

Flora Robson

Queen Elizabeth

Photo of Alan Hale

Alan Hale

Carl Pitt

Photo of Henry Daniell

Henry Daniell

Lord Wolfingham

Photo of Una O'Connor

Una O'Connor

Miss Latham

Photo of Gilbert Roland

Gilbert Roland

Capt. Lopez

Photo of William Lundigan

William Lundigan

Danny Logan

Photo of Montagu Love

Montagu Love

King Philip II

Photo of Julien Mitchell

Julien Mitchell

Oliver Scott

Photo of David Bruce

David Bruce

Martin Burke

Photo of Clifford Brooke

Clifford Brooke

William Tuttle

Photo of Clyde Cook

Clyde Cook

Walter Boggs

Photo of Fritz Leiber

Fritz Leiber

Inquisitor

Photo of Pedro de Cordoba

Pedro de Cordoba

Capt. Mendoza

Photo of Ian Keith

Ian Keith

Peralta

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

8/10

First things first. This has virtually nothing at all to do with the 1924 Frank Lloyd version nor, indeed, does it have very much to do with the original Rafael Sabatini novel either - but it is still probably my favourite Errol Flynn film. The story is (very) loosely based on the courageous activities of the privateers who raided the Spanish treasure ships during the reign of Elizabeth I of England (rather convincingly portrayed here by Flora Robson). Flynn seizes an ambassadorial galleon on which are travelling Claude Rains and Brenda Marshall, and a tale of espionage, secrecy, love and skullduggery ensues for an exciting couple of hours. Korngold always had the skill to add something special with his score to these seafaring adventure films - and he does in abundance here too (though perhaps not the songs with the shockingly terrible rhymes!?). Henry Daniell is also worthy of mention as the duplicitous "Lord Wolfingham" and Michael Curtiz is at his action-packed best as he offers us loads of swash, buckle and a thoroughly enjoyable piece of cinema that you ought to see on the big screen if you get a chance.

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