The Great White Whale of Silent Spectacle: John Barrymore and the Making of "The Sea Beast"
The Sea Beast opened on January 15, 1926, to one of the biggest advance advertising campaigns in silent film history. In terms of billing and enthusiasm, The Sea Beast was no ordinary prestige picture: it was a project expressly tailored to the needs of an actor in the prime of his day-stealing career, John Barrymore, and to the requirements of an adaptation of one of the nation's most daunting masterpieces, Herman Melville's Moby-Dick, for popular consumption. The result was not a faithful adaptation but a bold, romanticized reinvention that captured the spirit of obsession and the scale of the sea, even as it reshaped the story into something unmistakably Hollywood.