"Defying the Odds"
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What You Need To Know:
YOUNG WOMAN AND THE SEA is one of the best movies in a long time. It’s extremely well plotted, superbly directed and beautifully acted, with a rich musical score. YOUNG WOMAN AND THE SEA has a strong morally uplifting worldview with strong Christian, biblical references and values celebrating courage, forgiveness, loyalty, and fortitude. It also has references to prayer, church and the Hand of God. MOVIEGUIDE® advises caution for younger children because of intense swimming scenes.
Content:
More Detail:
YOUNG WOMAN AND THE SEA is one of the best movies in a long time. The movie is extremely well plotted, superbly directed, beautifully acted, and surprisingly uses a full orchestra to produce a rich musical accompaniment.
Based on a true story about a German American family living in Brooklyn in the 1920s, the movie starts with one of the children, Gertrude or Trudy for short, almost dying of measles. Miraculously she recovers, but at the time of her recovery, a steamboat in New York Harbor catches fire and sinks with the loss of 847 lives, many of them part of a church group. Affected by the tragedy, Trudy tells her mother she wants to learn how to swim. However, girls don’t swim, and girls are not supposed to be athletes. In fact, swimming is considered bad for their health. When Trudy persists, her father takes her to Coney Island, ties a rope to her, and Trudy starts to teach herself how to swim.
Eventually, Trudy’s mother locates a woman who’s teaching young women how to race in swimming. The woman accepts Trudy’s sister, Meg, on her developing swim team but won’t take Trudy because she had measles. Eventually, Trudy overcomes all odds. She wins a place on the team and eventually the Chairman of the American Olympic Committee overseeing swimming events has her American woman’s team race against an Australian team. Trudy outperforms everybody.
Trudy becomes a celebrity, and she is accepted on the first American women’s Olympic team, but the coach, a Mr. Wolffe, is prejudiced against the women and refuses to let them train. So, they do badly at the Paris Olympics.
Trudy returns home to find out her sister is engaged to a German boy who’s a butcher like her father in a traditional arranged marriage. Trudy is disappointed with her sister’s situation. Then, when she hears about how difficult it is to swim the 21 miles of the English Channel, she decides to swim the English Channel.
Everything is stacked against Trudy. The American Olympic organizer appoints the same Mr. Wolffe to be her coach, and he tries to sabotage her. However, an Englishman named Mr. Burgess who swam the Channel twice decides to help her.
The English Channel is some of the roughest water, with unpredictable storms and currents, not to mention sharks, jellyfish and treacherous shoals. Nobody thinks Trudy can make it, but will she prove them wrong?
YOUNG WOMAN AND THE SEA is so well constructed that it defines what a movie should be. The movie avoids all the pitfalls of being ultraviolent or hyper-sexual, or loaded with foul language, and just tells a great, great story. In some ways, it’s similar to THE BOYS IN THE BOAT, but even better. Some caution is required for younger children because of the intense jeopardy when Trudy swims the English Channel and also the breaking down of the stereotypical cultural artifacts of the 1920s.