COURTESY OF THE VENICE FILM FESTIVAL |
Paramount+ has picked up Academy Award winning-director William Friedkin’s last film, The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial for all international territories where the service is currently live, the company announced Sunday. That includes the United States, Canada, Latin America, the Caribbean, Australia, the United Kingdom, Italy, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, France and South Korea. However, for the United States, there will be a branding difference: It's going to be a Showtime film.
The film, Friedkin's last writing and directorial effort, is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Hermon Wouk, just had its world premiere at the 80th Venice Film Festival Sunday night. It stars Kiefer Sutherland, who stars on the service's series Rabbit Hole, Jason Clarke, Jake Lacy, Monica Raymund, Lewis Pullman, Jay Duplass, Tom Riley and the late Lance Reddick.
In The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial, Clarke plays Barney Greenwald, a skeptical lawyer for the navy who reluctantly agrees to defend Lt. Steve Maryk, played by Lacy, a First Officer facing court-martial for taking over the U.S.S. Caine from its authoritarian captain, Sutherland's Lt. Philip Francis Queeg during a violent storm while at sea. As the trial goes on, Greenwald's concern grows, beginning to questions if the events at hand were a true mutiny or simply the courageous acts of a group of sailors who could no longer trust their increasingly unstable leader.