NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Celestial Navigation in the Movies
From: Jackson McDonald
Date: 2015 Mar 23, 19:38 +0000
From: Jackson McDonald
Date: 2015 Mar 23, 19:38 +0000
And there is a John Wayne movie, a Hollywood patriotic film made during World War II, in which he is a naval officer aboard a warship in the Pacific theater. John Wayne looks through the sextant, lowers it, and then reads latitude and longitude right off the instrument. Only John Wayne can do that!
From: NoReply_EdPopko@fer3.com
To: jacksonmcdonald@hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2015 09:06:43 -0700
Subject: [NavList] Celestial Navigation in the Movies
From: NoReply_EdPopko@fer3.com
To: jacksonmcdonald@hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2015 09:06:43 -0700
Subject: [NavList] Celestial Navigation in the Movies
I'm drawn to examples of celestial navigation in movies. Some examples:
Poor - Cpt Nemo in Disney’s 1954 movie 2000 Leagues Under the Sea staring Kirk Douglas, James Mason, Paul Lukas and Peter Lorre, is probably the worst demonstration. A quick glance through the scope, declaration of "We'r here" and tosses the sextant to the first mate.
Curious - All is Lost with Robert Redford, interesting! But is he looking wrong way? The sun is to his back.
Good - Charles Laughton played a duty-obsessed, cruel and arrogant Captain Bligh in the 1935 movie Mutiny on the Bounty. He did a reasonable job for noon sights.
Good - Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World a 2003 starring Russell Crowe as Jack Aubrey, excellent LAN shots while instructing young midshipmen.
Excellent - Das Boot, by far the best demonstration of sextant use is this German WWII submarine movie directed by Wolfgange Petersen in which navigator Kriechbaum takes an sunset star shot with a lovely Plath sextant. All elements are right on! See the attached clip.
Perhaps NavList viewers have seen others.
Ed Popko
Attached File:
(All-is-Lost-Robert-Redford.jpg: Open and save)
Attached File:
Das-Boot-Kriechbaum-Sextant-.mp4 (no preview available)
Poor - Cpt Nemo in Disney’s 1954 movie 2000 Leagues Under the Sea staring Kirk Douglas, James Mason, Paul Lukas and Peter Lorre, is probably the worst demonstration. A quick glance through the scope, declaration of "We'r here" and tosses the sextant to the first mate.
Curious - All is Lost with Robert Redford, interesting! But is he looking wrong way? The sun is to his back.
Good - Charles Laughton played a duty-obsessed, cruel and arrogant Captain Bligh in the 1935 movie Mutiny on the Bounty. He did a reasonable job for noon sights.
Good - Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World a 2003 starring Russell Crowe as Jack Aubrey, excellent LAN shots while instructing young midshipmen.
Excellent - Das Boot, by far the best demonstration of sextant use is this German WWII submarine movie directed by Wolfgange Petersen in which navigator Kriechbaum takes an sunset star shot with a lovely Plath sextant. All elements are right on! See the attached clip.
Perhaps NavList viewers have seen others.
Ed Popko
Attached File:
(All-is-Lost-Robert-Redford.jpg: Open and save)
Attached File:
Das-Boot-Kriechbaum-Sextant-.mp4 (no preview available)