The real teenagers, 4 people shipwrecked drifting 24 days,rescued only 3 people left, the last one was killed by the other three, because the conditions were bad, everyone has been many days without eating anything, this time it took the method of drawing lots to one person's life in exchange for the survival of the three, but in fact, there is an inside story, so different people have different opinions about this.
July 1884, the British cruise ship "Rhinoceros" encountered a storm in the South Atlantic. There were four people crammed into the small lifeboat: Captain Dudley, First Mate Stephen, Sailor Brooke, and 17 year old Reece Pike. Conditions were pretty rough, to say the least, with only a little turnip on board, no fresh water, no food, and, more importantly, 1,300 miles from land. Three days before the sinking, all four men on board survived on rainwater and a little turnip. On the fourth day, they caught a turtle swimming on the surface, and so they ate for another five days. However, after many days, they had nothing to eat. These four men went seven days without food and five days without water. While perhaps this is a bit of an exaggeration, it nevertheless shows the extent of the harshness of the environment at the time.
In desperation, Captain Dudley decided to draw straws to exchange the life of the losing one for the lives of the other three, but Brooke was adamantly against it.On July 24, Dudley once again suggested that a vote should be taken, in effect against Parker. Of the four children, Parker is the only orphan, has no family or friends, and is by far the weakest. The other three had homes and families of their own, and they were not content to die that way. But Brooke remains vehemently opposed, and Dudley and Steven reluctantly choose a compromise: if they can't be rescued the next day, they'll eat Junior Pie.
In the end, although the three survived because they ate their companions, they nevertheless suffered condemnation, and of course there were those who understood their behavior, with varying views from person to person.