Kon-Tiki (2012 film)
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By Nordisk Film – Fair use, Link
Kon-Tiki | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Joachim Rønning Espen Sandberg |
Written by | Petter Skavlan [no] |
Produced by | Jeremy ThomasAage Aaberge |
Starring | Pål Sverre Hagen Anders Baasmo Christiansen Tobias Santelmann Gustaf Skarsgård Odd-Magnus Williamson Jakob Oftebro Agnes Kittelsen |
Cinematography | Geir Hartly Andreassen |
Edited by | Per-Erik Eriksen Martin Stoltz |
Music by | Johan Söderqvist |
Production companies | Nordisk FilmFilm i VästRecorded Picture Company DCM Productions n Roenberg film |
Distributed by | Nordisk Film |
Release date | 24 August 2012 |
Running time | 119 minutes (Norwegian language) 114 minutes (English language) |
Countries | Norway Denmark Germany Sweden United Kingdom |
Languages | Norwegian English |
Budget | 93 million NOK (c. US$15.5 million) |
Box office | $22.8 million |
Kon-Tiki is a 2012 historical drama film directed by Joachim Rønning and Espen Sandberg about the 1947 Kon-Tiki expedition. The film was mainly shot on the island of Malta. The role of Thor Heyerdahl is played by Pål Sverre Hagen. The film is an international co-production between Norway, Denmark, Germany, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.
It was the highest-grossing film of 2012 in Norway and the country’s most expensive production to date. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 85th Academy Awards. It is Norway’s fifth Academy Award nomination. The film was also nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 70th Golden Globe Awards. It is the first time a Norwegian film has been nominated for both an Oscar and a Golden Globe.
Plot
The film is the dramatized story of Thor Heyerdahl and his Kon-Tiki expedition of 1947.
While the prevailing theories of the time held that Polynesia had been settled by peoples migrating from the west, Heyerdahl, an experimental ethnographer and adventurer, sets out to prove his theory that people from South America settled the islands in pre-Columbian times.
Noting similarities between statues found in South America and the Polynesian moai, Heyerdahl’s theory about the origin of the Polynesian people is bolstered by Polynesian folklore that tells of an ancient tribe called the Hanau epe that are said to have once inhabited Easter Island. While most experts hold that such a voyage across the vast ocean is unlikely to have ever been successful, in order to illustrate that there were no technological limitations that would have inhibited the ancient peoples from making the journey, Heyerdahl puts his theory to the test and builds a balsawood raft using the same techniques that would have been utilized 1,500 years ago by the indigenous peoples of the region. Though he himself cannot swim or sail, he sets out on the treacherous 4,300 nautical mile–journey across the Pacific from Peru to Polynesia aboard the small raft, along with his crew of five men (and a macaw named Lorita).
During the three months aboard the primitive vessel named after Inca god of sun and storm, Kon-Tiki, the crew’s scientific reenactment of the legendary voyage from the coast of Peru to the Polynesian islands is met with setbacks in the form of storms, sharks, and other perils of the open sea.
With support from the US government, he eventually reaches Polynesia. He then returns home, after divorcing from his wife, and decides to open the Kon-Tiki Museum in Oslo.
Cast
- Pål Sverre Hagen as Thor Heyerdahl, the expedition leader who seeks to prove with his expedition that Polynesia was settled from South America. After living on Fatu Hiva and studying the Ancient peoples of South America and Polynesia he believed that there was a link between the two.
- Anders Baasmo Christiansen as Herman Watzinger, an engineer in charge of technical and meteorological measurements on board. He was the first to join Heyerdahl’s expedition.
- Tobias Santelmann as Knut Haugland, the crew’s radio expert and a decorated war hero known for his participation in the Norwegian heavy water sabotage that prevented the Germans from developing what was believed to be an atomic bomb.
- Gustaf Skarsgård as Bengt Danielsson, a Swedish ethnographer in charge of supplies and daily rations. He served as the crew’s translator, as he was the only member who was fluent in Spanish.
- Odd-Magnus Williamson as Erik Hesselberg, the crew’s navigator, artist and a childhood friend of Heyerdahl. He also painted the large Kon-Tiki figure on the raft’s sail.
- Jakob Oftebro as Torstein Raaby, the crew’s telegraphist who was also well known for hiding behind German lines during WW2, spying on the German Battleship Tirpitz. His radio transmissions were decisive for the Allied bombing raid that sank the ship.
- Agnes Kittelsen as Liv Heyerdahl (née Coucheron-Torp), Thor’s wife who finds herself more and more estranged by her husband’s ambitions.
- Manuel Cauchi as José Bustamante y Rivero, the 33rd President of Peru who agrees to fund Heyerdahl’s expedition through his contacts in the U.S. Navy.
- Søren Pilmark as Peter Freuchen, a Danish explorer and anthropologist known for Arctic exploration, especially the Thule Expeditions. He also encourages Heyerdahl to apply native techniques in order to succeed with the expedition.
- Peter Wight as Prof. Herbert Spinden, an American anthropologist and archeologist whose rejection of Heyerdahl’s theory prompts the expedition to take place.
Production
Filming
Principal photography for Kon-Tiki took place in Norway, Malta, Bulgaria, Thailand, Sweden, and the Maldives over a period of three and a half months. Against the advice of many, the filmmakers decided to shoot the ocean scenes on the open ocean rather than on a set, insisting that the “unique challenges” they faced from shooting on the ocean actually strengthen the film.
Language
In an unusual technique, the film was shot simultaneously in Norwegian and English, with each scene being filmed twice, first in Norwegian and then in English. This resulted in two versions of the film to be released, one primarily for the Norwegian domestic market, the other for an international audience. In a few cases, such as action scenes and computer-generated sequences, they used the same shot, later adding English with dubbing.
Historical accuracy
While much of the story is historically accurate, screenwriter Petter Skavlan and director Joachim Rønning both felt the need to make the story more exciting for their two-hour feature film. The fictionalized elements have been criticized. Film critic Andrew Barker commented: “It’s frustratingly ironic that Kon-Tiki’s most outrageously fantastical sequences are completely verifiable, and its most predictable, workaday conflicts are completely made up”.
One inaccuracy is the absence of indigenous Polynesians from the cast. The scenes depicting Heyerdahl’s experiences on Fatu Hiva were shot in Thailand with Thai extras who do not resemble native Polynesians, and who are shown holding compound spears not typical of the Marquesas Islands, and weaving rattan baskets, of which neither the technique nor the plant material are native to French Polynesia.
The film focuses on Heyerdahl’s theory that Polynesia was first populated with humans from Peru, but it ignores the Norwegian’s more ethnocentric speculations that the original Kon-Tiki voyage was undertaken by a race of tall white bearded people with red hair. Heyerdahl conjectured that Amerindian civilizations like the Aztecs and the Incas only arose with the help of advanced technical knowledge brought by early European voyagers, and that these white people were eventually driven out of Peru and fled westward on rafts.
The film has the crew worrying about getting sucked into “the Galapagos maelstrom”, with a book shown that purportedly illustrates the maelstrom. The illustration is actually artist Harry Clarke’s 1919 illustration for Edgar Allan Poe’s short story, “A Descent Into the Maelström“, a fictional account of a whirlpool in Norwegian waters. The description of its roar, which can be heard from nine miles away, is taken directly from Poe’s story. Although Heyerdahl did refer to “treacherous eddies” near the Galapagos, his chief worry there was that “strong ocean currents” could sweep the raft back towards Central America.
The portrayal of the raft’s second-in-command, Herman Watzinger, proved controversial in Norway. Colleagues and relatives say Watzinger in the film is unlike the real-life Watzinger, physically or in his actions. Actor Baasmo Christiansen acknowledged the physical differences with a smile: “Watzinger was tall, dark, and Norwegian Youth Champion in the 100 meter. He was everything I’m not”. In the film, Watzinger disobeys Heyerdahl’s direct order and throws a harpoon at a whale shark under the boat, but it was actually Erik Hesselberg who harpooned the whale shark, with the crew cheering him on. The film’s Watzinger, worried about the hemp ropes’ ability to hold the balsa logs together for the entire voyage, tearfully begs Heyerdahl at sea to add steel cables Watzinger smuggled aboard but Heyerdahl’s book contains no such scene and Watzinger’s daughter has stated it never happened: “My father was a stout and confident man, and he never thought that way about the balsa logs and the ropes”. Thor Heyerdahl Jr., who worked with Watzinger, concurred in the criticism of the film’s portrayal of Watzinger.
Other minor alterations from Heyerdahl’s book include the ship’s parrot being eaten by a shark in the film (its real-life counterpart was simply washed overboard by a large wave).
The film also shows the crew only getting access to valuable US military equipment once they have arrived in Peru and are building the raft, whereas Heyerdahl in fact arranged for the equipment at a visit to the Pentagon before traveling to Peru.
Release
The film premiered on 18 August 2012 at the 40th Norwegian International Film Festival in Haugesund. A North American screening took place at the Toronto International Film Festival.
The Weinstein Company acquired the distribution rights for North America and Italy in November 2012.
Box office
Kon-Tiki opened in Norway on 24 August 2012, setting a weekend national box office record. It became the highest-grossing of 2012 in Norway, earning $14,111,514, and overtaking the film Max Manus: Man of War, also by directors Rønning and Sandberg.
Critical response
Kon-Tiki opened in the United States on 26 April 2013 in a limited release, and was screened in three cinemas. Later on May 3, the film expanded to screen in fifty more cinemas and was a major box office success in its home country, Norway, in addition to gathering critical acclaim internationally.
The Hollywood Reporter‘s Sheri Linden says of Kon-Tiki: “This retelling of a bare-bones enterprise by six men took a crew of hundreds, and the results are nothing if not polished, with handsome period detail and visual effects that are convincing, if sometimes ostentatious. The widescreen lensing (the film was shot mainly in and around Malta) doesn’t overdo the sense of wonder and, with a strong assist from the sound design, conveys the men’s vulnerability to the elements”.
Andrew Barker of Variety notes that some may take issue with the artistic license the filmmakers took in dramatizing some of the characters and events of the voyage, but describes the film overall as “a visually impeccable, professionally crafted modern vessel that lacks any of the patched-together soul of its subject”.
While Michael Nordine of LA Weekly laments that Kon-Tiki “could have used a bit more [shark-attracting] blood in the water” and concedes that the “crystal-clear waves are a sight to behold nevertheless”.
Kon-Tiki has an approval rating of 81% on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 80 reviews, and an average rating of 7.00/10. The site’s consensus is: “A well-crafted retelling of an epic true story, Kon-Tiki is a throwback to old-school adventure filmmaking that’s exciting and entertaining in spite of its by-the-book plotting”. On Metacritic, the film has a 62/100 rating based on 23 critics, indicating “generally favorable reviews”.
Accolades
Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
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85th Academy Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Kon-Tiki | Nominated |
70th Golden Globe Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Kon-Tiki | Nominated |
40th Norwegian International Film Festival | Publikumsprisen (Audience Award) | Kon-Tiki | Won |
17th Satellite Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Kon-Tiki | Nominated |
Best Sound | Baard H. Ingebretsen, Tormod Ringes | Nominated |
Watch the movie
Kon-Tiki (1950 film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
By May be found at the following website: https://www.amazon.com, Fair use, Link
Kon-Tiki | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Thor Heyerdahl |
Written by | Thor Heyerdahl |
Produced by | Olle Nordemar |
Starring | Thor Heyerdahl |
Production company |
Artfilm |
Distributed by | Sandrew |
Release dates | 13 January 1950 (Sweden) 13 February 1950 (Norway) |
Running time | 77 minutes |
Countries | Norway, Sweden |
Language | Norwegian |
Kon-Tiki is a Norwegian documentary film about the Kon-Tiki expedition led by Norwegian explorer and writer Thor Heyerdahl in 1947, released in Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark in 1950, followed by the United States in 1951. The movie, which was directed by Thor Heyerdahl and edited by Olle Nordemar, received the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1951 at the 24th Academy Awards. The Oscar officially went to Olle Nordemar.
The Academy Film Archive preserved Kon-Tiki in 2013.
Content
The movie has an introduction explaining Heyerdahl’s theory, then shows diagrams and images explaining the building of the raft and its launch from Peru. Thereafter it is a film of the crew on board, shot by themselves, with commentary written by Heyerdahl and translated. The whole film is black and white, shot on a single 16mm camera.
A small amount of color footage of Kon-Tiki does exist.
Watch the 1950 version
Kon-Tiki (song)
By The cover art can be obtained from Columbia., Fair use, Link
“Kon-Tiki” | |
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Single by The Shadows | |
B-side | “36-24-36” |
Released | 1 September 1961 |
Recorded | 27 January 1961 |
Studio | EMI Studios, London |
Genre | Instrumental surf |
Length | 1:51 |
Label | Columbia |
Songwriter(s) | Michael Carr |
Producer(s) | Norrie Paramor |
The Shadows singles chronology | |
“The Frightened City“ (1961)”Kon-Tiki“ (1961)”The Savage“ (1961) |
“Kon-Tiki” is an instrumental tune by British group the Shadows, released as a single in September 1961. It was the group’s fifth hit and their second to top the UK Singles Chart.
Background and release
“Kon-Tiki” was written by Michael Carr, who had previously written “Man of Mystery” for the group. It refers to the raft used by Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl on his 1947 Kon-Tiki expedition. It was released with the B-side “36-24-36”, which was written by the four Shadows members.
Track listing
7″: Columbia / DB 4698
- “Kon-Tiki” – 1:51
- “36-24-36” – 1:42
Personnel
- Hank Marvin – electric lead guitar
- Bruce Welch – acoustic rhythm guitar
- Jet Harris – electric bass guitar
- Tony Meehan – drums
Charts
Chart (1961–62) | Peak position |
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Australia (Kent Music Report) | 4 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia) | 35 |
France | 7 |
Germany (Official German Charts) | 29 |
New Zealand (Lever Hit Parade) | 5 |
Norway (VG-lista) | 7 |
UK Singles (OCC) | 1 |
Kon-Tiki – The Shadows (cover played by Eric)
Kon-Tiki – Cover by Old Guitar Monkey
The Spotnicks – Kon-Tiki
Golden Guitars – Kon Tiki
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