And while great white sharks have likely visited Hawaii for centuries, scientists think there probably isn’t a resident population. Female white sharks seem to be mostly solitary creatures. The sighting is also unusual for both the number and sex of animals spotted. ET on National Geographic Channel, as part of SharkFest. Watch World’s Biggest Great White?, which airs July 21 at 8 p.m. And that meant astonishing underwater views, including photos and video, of Deep Blue and the other great whites feeding, offering a rare glimpse into the lives of these top predators. “It was one of those rare weeks where there’s no wind there’s no swells,” Jeffries says. (Most female great whites average around 15 to 16 feet.) Over three days, Jeffries and her colleagues documented the extraordinary spectacle-while maintaining a respectful distance-as two more mature female white sharks came to chow down on the sperm whale carcass. Stretching some 20 feet from tip to tail, it was the famous Deep Blue, one of the largest great white sharks ever caught on film. Mere moments after she jumped in, something tens of feet below caught her eye: a massive great white shark wending her way up from the deep. It was January 2019, and Jeffries, a Hawaii-based nature and wildlife photographer, had arrived at this spot a couple of miles southwest of Waikiki hoping to catch a glimpse of predators drawn to the floating cetacean feast. 'Thor: Love and Thunder' stars Chris opposite Natalie Portman and is released in July.Kimberly Jeffries spotted the dead sperm whale from nearly half a mile away-a white mass the size of a bus bobbing in the calm early-morning waters. And I thought: 'Cool, I have a way into this'." "And he had written this i script which was a wacky, crazy, romantic comedy set in space and that I hadn't seen before. He added: "Being able to work with Taika again, I don't know if I would have done another one if Taika hadn't said yes, he was gonna do it. "Ĭhris and Taika have reunited for the upcoming fourth film 'Thor: Love and Thunder' and the actor admits he might have walked away from the franchise if the director hadn't agreed to return. I really wanted to break the mould and I said this to Taika and I think the conversation we had was I said 'I'm really bored of Thor' and he said 'Yeah I'm really bored of Thor too' and then we decided not to be bored and any time that feeling came into play, we'd go in a different direction."Ĭhris added: "And so, we just dismantled the character, we wanted to have him be a little more unpredictable, we wanted him to be in a different set of circumstances than he'd been in before and also have the humour come through. And then when Ragnarok came along, out of my own sort of frustration of what I'd done And this is not any any other director or anyone, this was my own performance. ![]() I don't think I showed the audience anything different or unexpected. I didn't think I grew the character in any way. I was a little disappointed in what I'd done. He told Vanity Fair: "I wasn't stoked with what I'd done in Thor 2. The Australian actor has admitted he was "bored" of the Marvel character and wasn't impressed with his own performance in the second film, 2013's 'Thor: The Dark World' but felt Taika reinvigorated the franchise with 2017's 'Thor: Ragnarok'. Chris Hemsworth might have walked away from the 'Thor' movies if Taika Waititi hadn't agreed to direct the fourth installment.
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