Clooney on Jimmy Kimmel Live
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Part 2 on the boats used. The attention to detail down to the oarlock swivels...https://www.row2k.com/features/6205/building-boats-for--the-boys----part-2/
Getting down to specific details like the wood grain would go on to play a role in the film, differentiating Washington's Pocock hull from the other shells in the Olympic final.
"The boats had to look different," Brent Keuch said, "because in 1936 [at the Olympics], there was only one Pocock."
"In the final, you had the Italians using the Donoratico, the Germans were using a Pirsch, the British were using the Sims," according to O’Neill. "With all of those, there wasn't that much obvious difference, but what was very different was that the gunnel on the Pocock used a very light colored pine. So the boat was two-tone and it was quite distinct, whereas the other boats would be stain varnished all the way over in one color."
Part 2 on the boats used. The attention to detail down to the oarlock swivels...https://www.row2k.com/features/6205/building-boats-for--the-boys----part-2/
Getting down to specific details like the wood grain would go on to play a role in the film, differentiating Washington's Pocock hull from the other shells in the Olympic final.
"The boats had to look different," Brent Keuch said, "because in 1936 [at the Olympics], there was only one Pocock."
"In the final, you had the Italians using the Donoratico, the Germans were using a Pirsch, the British were using the Sims," according to O’Neill. "With all of those, there wasn't that much obvious difference, but what was very different was that the gunnel on the Pocock used a very light colored pine. So the boat was two-tone and it was quite distinct, whereas the other boats would be stain varnished all the way over in one color."
