![]() ![]() As it drifts away from the drowning fat man, his slim companions frantically distract the crazed sharks with chunks of flesh. Meanwhile, the sixth crewmate-this one short, plump and craven-slips off the edge of the raft, which can neither stop nor turn back. The shark’s blood seeps through the balsa timbers of the Kon-Tiki, inciting a feeding frenzy down below. During the scene in ques- tion, one of the tall and slim and valiant is so enraged by the bird’s death that he thrusts his bare hands into the Pacific, hauls in the shark and guts it with a savagery that would have made Norman Bates envious. In mid-passage, their pet macaw is blown overboard and gobbled up by a big bad shark. In the 2012 reconstruction of this 1947 adventure, six amateur Scandinavian sailors-five of whom are tall, slim and valiant-build a replica of an ancient pre-Incan raft, christen it Kon-Tiki and sail westward from Peru along the Humboldt Current for French Polynesia, more than 3,700 nautical miles away. The most harrowing scene in Kon-Tiki, the new Oscar-nominated Norwegian film about the greatest sea voyage of modern times, turns out to be a fish story. ![]()
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