In 1850, author
Herman Melville visits innkeeper
Thomas Nickerson, the last survivor of the sunk whaleship
Essex, offering money for his story. Nickerson initially refuses, then agrees after his wife intervenes. In 1820 a
Nantucket whaling company has refitted the
Essex for a
whale hunt to bring back lucrative
whale oil; 14-year-old Nickerson joins as a
cabin boy. Veteran whaler
Owen Chase is hired as first mate, though he is disappointed not to receive a captain's commission. Captain
George Pollard is an inexperienced mariner who envies Chase's skill and popularity. They clash, and Pollard sails into a storm against Chase's advice. They agree to put their differences aside and soon the crew kills their first bull
sperm whale. Three months pass without success, and Pollard realizes that the
Atlantic Ocean holds no sighting of whales. The
Essex rounds
Cape Horn to the
Pacific, hoping for better luck. In
Atacames,
Ecuador, a Spanish captain tells them of the bountiful "Offshore Grounds" 2,000 miles to the west, but says a vengeful "white whale" destroyed his ship, killing six of his men. Undaunted, Pollard and Chase lead the expedition west. They find the grounds, but when they launch the whaling boats,
a massive bull sperm whale with white, scarred skin damages the boats and turns on the ship. Chase
harpoons it from the
Essex deck, but the whale rams the hull, killing two men. The crew abandons the sinking
Essex in three whaling boats, and must sail hundreds of miles to shore with limited supplies. The whale attacks again and they escape to the tiny
Henderson Island. Chase discovers long-dead skeletons of earlier
castaways, and the crew fears they might also die waiting for rescue. Four men stay while the rest set sail hoping to find better lands. The three boats are separated and one is lost. In one of the three boats that left Henderson Island, one of the sailors dies, and the others reluctantly decide to
cannibalise him. Nickerson stops his retelling of his story, overcome with remorse for his cannibalism and believing his wife could not love him after hearing of it. She has been eavesdropping, however, and reassures him she still loves him. Comforted, he continues his story. The men in the second remaining boat also resort to cannibalism and resort to drawing straws to decide who will sacrificed, with Pollard's cousin Owen Coffin drawing the short straw. The white whale returns, and Chase takes position to attack. When the white whale breaches, Chase sees his previously thrown harpoon still embedded above the white whale's eye. Chase stares into the white whale's eye as the whale stares back. Chase lowers his harpoon and the white whale swims away, never to be seen again. The two boats become separated. Pollard's boat is rescued by a passing ship, but Chase's continues to drift. With the survivors on the verge of death, they reach
Chile's
Alejandro Selkirk Island. They are fed, clothed, and make their way back to Nantucket, where they reunite with their families. The ships' owners ask Pollard and Chase to cover up the story of a whale destroying the ship, to protect the industry's reputation. Chase, having had enough of their dishonesty, refuses and resigns. Although initially loyal to the owners, Pollard later reveals the truth in the inquiry, much to the owners' anger. Nickerson relates that a ship was sent to Henderson Island to rescue the men there; three were still alive. Chase continued sailing and became a merchant captain. Pollard led another expedition to find and kill the white whale, but never found it. His ship ran aground off the
Hawaiian Islands and he was forced to retire. Melville promises Nickerson that his novel will be fiction, without all the details that had been shared with him. He departs to compose his novel,
Moby-Dick, beginning by writing its first line: "Call me
Ishmael". ==Cast==