Lamoine Man’s Incredible Story of Survival Coming to Reel Pizza Cinerama in powerful documentary.
Oct 07, 2025

The Bar Harbor Story is generously sponsored by The Witham Family Hotels Charitable Fund.

BAR HARBOR—Two and a half months. 76 days. 1,824 hours. 109,440 minutes. An eternity.
No matter how you measure it, surviving for that amount of time in the open ocean in a six-foot raft with minimal supplies takes endurance, ingenuity, the will to survive, and perhaps a little luck.
In 1982, Lamoine resident Steven Callahan set out on a sailing adventure across the Atlantic in a 21-foot sailboat. The boat, Napoleon Solo, had been designed and built by Callahan himself in Lamoine.
Callahan sailed the boat from Rhode Island to Bermuda, solo. From Bermuda, he and his sailing partner Chris Latchem sailed Napoleon Solo to Cornwall, England, before parting ways, with Callahan continuing on alone for the next solo part of his adventure.
Then, five days out from the Canary Islands and 500-600 miles away from any shore, Callahan encountered a severe storm. During the storm, Callahan struck what he thought must have been a whale, causing catastrophic damage to the Napoleon Solo.

With only minutes before the boat sank into the Atlantic, Callahan gathered what he could and took it with him into his six-foot raft, embarking on an 1,800-mile fight for survival.
Along with his intelligence, ingenuity, and will to survive, there were four items that Callahan had with him that would help him to make it through that long drift: a short spear gun purchased on the spur of the moment at one of his earlier coastal visits during the trip and three solar stills from around the Vietnam era.
Those three solar stills produced, in total, approximately one pint of water per day, about half of the amount of water the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine says an adult man needs to drink daily.
Two and a half months, or 76 days later, Callahan was rescued approximately 140 miles off the coast of Marie-Galante which is about 140 miles from Antigua.

Much of the information above comes from Robert Sennott, an executive producer of 76 Days Adrift, a man who is very excited about this movie and a man who is very excited to be bringing this movie to Reel Pizza in Bar Harbor.
“There is so much social profit in this movie,” Sennott said. “I don’t care how much money it makes, but I deeply care about the social profit.”
Sennott and Callahan went to high school together and while not the best of friends, they were both on the school’s track team. Sennott was very much aware when Callahan was lost at sea and when he was rescued. He followed his post ordeal appearances on the Johnny Carson Show, his book’s publishing, how he made a life for himself as a consultant to sailors and movies, and became the senior editor of Cruising World magazine.
Callahan’s book about his survival, his ordeal, titled Adrift: 76 Days Lost At Sea spent more than 36 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.
Having been involved in movie production before, Sennott says that he had a “Field of Dreams” moment about five years ago and knew that if a movie about Callahan’s ordeal could be made properly, the viewers would come.
Joe Wein the director and producer of 76 Days Adrift had also thought that Callahan’s story would make a great movie and by the time Sennott hooked up with him, Wein had already recorded 25 hours of interview with Callahan at Callahan’s Lamoine home.
The rest was movie-making history.
The film has been earning widespread acclaim and consistently selling out screenings at numerous prestigious festivals and art-house theaters.
At the DOC NYC, the largest documentary film festival in the country, 76 Days Adrift stayed in the top-ten most popular films for each day it was available. Then, it hit the #1 spot. History happened in real time.
The history of the film’s making includes the film makers teaming up with Executive Producer Ang Lee. The Academy Award-winning Lee is known for such movies as Life of Pi, Brokeback Mountain, and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
Callahan had worked with Lee as a consultant on Life of Pi. Deeply moved by the profound resilience and emotional depth of Callahan’s remarkable survival story, Lee joined Wein as executive producer.
That history also includes a detailed recreation of the story using recorded interviews, original 8mm film that was taken on the Napoleon Solo prior to the disaster, previous news coverage as Callahan’s saga unfolded in 1982, and painstaking recreation of events using items authentic to what Callahan used.
Wein actually plays Callahan in the movie for the raft scenes which feature shots from under the water. The total effect of the scenery in the film both under the water and out of the water combine to make what, according to Sennott, is an “amazing confluence of nature.”
All 105 minutes of the film are set to an original soundtrack composed by Fall Out Boy’s lead singer, Patrick Stump. The score was recorded by the Royal Scottish Orchestra and plays behind the narration done by Callahan himself.
When the credits roll, standing up is a challenge as Stump’s cover of Iggy Pop’s The Passenger starts to play, a fitting end to a remarkable story.
TO RESERVE YOUR SEAT WHILE THEY STILL EXIST
76 Days Adrift will be playing at Reel Pizza Cinerama Friday, October 10, through Thursday, October 16. All showtimes are 6:45 p.m.
Reel Pizza Cinerama – 76 Days Adrift
https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/_a79PTPm0VA?rel=0&autoplay=0&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=0
Photos via 76 Days Adrift.
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