Friday, July 22, 2011

'Tabarly' - the movie

Affiche miniature du film Tabarly      note from Nat: Eric Tabarly said that boats had to be fast, sea-worthy and beautiful. 'Multihulls are not beautiful and I regret that'.

He had introduced the spinnaker socks: he was doing a lot of single-handed sailing and this was one fo the ways he had thought of to allow him to take down spinnakers in heavy weather, alone and without getting too tired...

 

In the movie, you can see that some of the boats do not even have winches...

He also tried to use a tiller instead of a wheel because it allowed a better connection with the element. 

It is pretty crazy to see that alone or with a crew, there was no lifejackets, no harness...definitely totally crazy...

The man seemed to be so modest...never losing his cool...One of the greatest sailors to have ever lived I think.

 

Movie Review: Sailing film ‘Tabarly’ suits Newport fest well

 

01:00 AM EDT on Saturday, June 6, 2009

 

By Michael Janusonis

Journal Arts Writer

 

Tabarly documents the career of yachtsman Eric Tabarly, including footage of him arriving in Newport after winning the original Single-Handed Trans-Atlantic Race in 1976.


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The Newport International Film Festival ends its five-day run Sunday with the screening of a movie that, fittingly, begins in Newport and revolves around sailing.

Pierre Marcel’s documentary Tabarly is the story of legendary French sailor Eric Tabarly who we first see arriving in triumph in Newport Harbor in 1964 after having just won the single-handed North Atlantic sailboat race from Plymouth, England, to Newport. Overnight he becomes the toast of France, awarded the Legion of Honor, getting a parade down the Champs Elysees and being congratulated by Gen. Charles DeGaulle.

Tabarly became one of the world’s winningest sailors, always in black-hulled boats that were all named after his first boat, the Pen Duick. Because of his many victories, there’s a lot of film footage of Tabarly, including interviews with this modest man who seems most at home on the ocean. (He later confesses that reporters regarded him as aloof, but he maintains it was because they knew little about sailing and asked him inane questions.) There’s even footage of him when he was a French Navy pilot in Saigon, presented during a brief biographical background segment

Most of the footage, however, finds Tabarly sailing aboard the various Pen Duicks as he takes one world championship after another. It has been edited in a brisk, no-nonsense style. It includes thrilling shots of tremendous waves washing over the boat during storms.

Even when things go badly, such as a race cut short after Tabarly’s boat is slammed by a cargo ship in fog, he shows perseverance and resilience. On an around-the-world race he loses a mast, effectively putting him out of a win. But he doesn’t quit, pressing on after repairs to compete in the remaining three legs of the race. Handsome, charismatic and looking remarkably fit, at one point he climbs up the sails in a bathing suit in rough seas to make adjustments.

On June 29, 1976, we again see him arriving triumphantly in Newport Harbor after winning another solo North Atlantic race, beating the odds by skippering a boat designed for a 14-man crew. Out of contact for days, he was feared lost at sea, but managed to come in ahead of his one-time star pupil and despite having to pass through the worst storm in the history of the race. But it’s hardly the end of Tabarly’s career. There is still a 75-year-old world record to be broken on a sail from New York to England in 1980.

 

Tabarly, the story of one man’s obsession and his dreams, is an exciting film that even those who don’t go to sea will find inspirational.

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