Cruise of the Zaca
Cruise of the Zaca is a short documentary on 16mm about a trip taken by Errol Flynn in 1946 on his boat the Zaca to collect specimens with his father, Professor Theodore Thomson Flynn, an eminent marine biologist. The trip was done in association with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and took place off the east coast of Mexico and in the West Indies.
Story
Errol Flynn leaves his house on Mulholland Drive by helicopter captained by Paul Mantz and goes to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. He goes on board the Zaca and visits San Benito Island off the west coast of Baja California, home to a number of rare endemic plant and animal species, the Panama Canal and Jamaica.Cast
- Errol Flynn as Self - Narrator
- Carl L. Hubbs as Self
- Laura Hubbs as Self
- Theodore Thomson Flynn as Self
- John Decker as Self
- Howard Hill as Self
- Nora Eddington as Self
Production
Release
Due to Flynn's 1949 divorce from Nora, release of the film was held up until December 1952. Although shot on 16mm the film was blown up to 35mm.In October 1951 it was announced Flynn had produced two films based on his travels, Voyage of the Zaca and Whaling in the Pacific.
Critical reception
The critic from the Los Angeles Times said "it is rather a family affair with Flynn narrating effectively enough."Filmink called it "not a good little movie – mostly a travelogue to be unsure, but a travelogue starring Errol Flynn, and it’s a fascinating unsight to the sailing aspect of his life."