The Orca’s transom as a sacrificial ‘altar’.
Ah, this is one of the interesting things about movies. You take even the most basic film and read as little or as much into it as you wish.
In my more fanciful moments, I believe the blood stained transom gives a visual clue to how deep Quint’s hatred of sharks runs. Since the sinking of the Indianapolis, he just can’t kill enough of them. And rather than clean the boat, the stains there keep a record of every shark he has slaughtered in an attempt to deal with the memories.
And here’s the interesting thing; without that Indianapolis story, there is no Jaws movie. The whole third act of the film rests on Quint being trapped in what happened in the South Pacific in 1945. This will very much inform how I present this project when she is done.
When we first see the shark (a staggering 81 minutes into the film) it is when Brodie (land lubber police chief) is chumming fish remains into the water from the transom, baiting the shark and bringing the monster to them with blood that we see spattered over the back of the boat.
https://gfycat.com/beneficialhardkinkajou
That he does this over the transom is interesting as in one of the movie’s defining moments we see Quint eaten alive on that very transom, staining the water and the boat with his own blood.
Not that I’ve thought much about this.
@stephen-w-towle