Spoilers ho! Lots and lots of
spoilers so read at your peril if you plan to watch this film.
Wow, the writers really screwed
up this film which should have been a lay-up.
Did they even bother to talk with a single person who has spent more
than an hour on a sailboat or did they just wing it from their experience on
some Catalina Island booze cruise? The first problem he faced was an act of
god, as they say, and not his fault but just about every problem after that was
the result of his own stupidity and very poor seamanship. The movie is like
what not to do if you have an emergency in a small boat at sea. I was screaming
at the screen at times—that’s what U.S. Air Force Survival School and a couple seasons of racing yachts do to a boy.
So he hits a container putting a
nice hole in his starboard side about 2 feet X 2 feet. No biggie. He has resin
to patch it up which he does incompetently; he acts like he's repairing a broken kite. For some reason he loses all
electrical power. Why his engine doesn’t
work isn’t explained (and no back-up outboard motor for a yacht this size?). Why he would be on a single-handed ocean voyage with no knowledge of how to repair these damages is beyond my comprehension. Most of the sailors I've met who felt compelled to go on solo voyages were all geeks who could repair anything aboard a small craft. That's just the way these people are wired so when Redford flips a switch and nothing happens his first reaction shouldn't be to give up. Fucking fix it, man.
His sailing skill during the
storm was basically non-existent. You don’t wait until the excrement hits the
fan to put up your storm jib and reef the living daylights out of your
mainsail. Once again, what about his engine? To broach and capsize a boat that big you
really have to mess up royally, like letting yourself get hit right on the beam
with a huge swell. Why would you go below during a storm in the first damn
place? Ever heard the expression “All Hands on Deck?” I think that applies here
in spades; you can sleep and shave after the squall. In the end the fact that
his vessel goes down had little or nothing to do with the hole from the
container—he simply screwed up during the storm.
The most important rule in most
survival situations is WATER! It’s the most important thing to consider when
you finally abandon ship unless you can swim to shore. These days with all of
the survival foods available you could last for months in a life raft and some
people do provided you have water. Read Adrift
where the dude survived for 67 days and crosses the Atlantic after sinking
almost immediately after hitting a container in the dead of night. I would
imagine that most life rafts come with a solar still water purifier which is
little more than a blow-up beach ball (some rafts are solar stills). Just why he didn’t prep his life boat
after he hit the container was something I was wondering about way before his
ship sunk. He had plenty of fresh water onboard so why can’t he carry 20 gallons on to
the raft? They probably felt the dire water situation added drama but it made
him look like a clumsy child. His crappy solar still wouldn’t produce enough to
keep him alive for more than a couple days if that, not in the heat of the Indian Ocean.
I doubt that anyone has ever
learned celestial navigation on their own in a life raft at sea. I don’t think
it works that way. And why even bother trying to find your position when you
have no means of propulsion in the water. He had way bigger problems to worry
about, like water.
In this day and age I find it
very hard to believe that he would have no sort of communication. How about a
two-way radio? Jesus, they go for about $20 these days and are a lot better for
signaling a passing ship than a flare. Most ships these days won’t even have
anyone looking out at the sea. Why would they?Maybe this was a period piece set back in 1963 which would explain his lack of life-saving technology.
And then he sets his own craft on
fire which might happen if you start a fire in a plastic container in the
middle of a fucking rubber raft. He doesn’t deserve to survive instead he deserves a Darwin Award. What a complete
waste of what could have been a great movie. A great movie would have been the
survival tale of a really experienced and highly resourceful seaman, not like
this bungling fool.