There are many unbelievable true stories that have been told on the silver screen, but Hollywood could definitely do with taking a look at these next six. There are the two women that were rescued by chance after spending five months adrift or the Swedish actress that fell in love with a homeless alcoholic. Here are 6 amazing stories that are Hollywood movie material: Swedish actress Emmy Abrahamson was immediately drawn to homeless Vic Kocula's "beautiful brown eyes" when she met him on the streets of Amsterdam back in 2006. Although she realized he was homeless from his unkempt appearance, Emmy arranged to meet him again after they both felt the instant chemistry between them. She returned to Vienna, where she lived, thinking that she'd never see him again. To her surprise, Vic called her some three weeks after she returned home. The rest, as they say, is history – Vic quit drinking and became a mechanical engineer, the couple shares twins, and they've been married for 10 years and counting.   Oksana was abandoned at a Ukrainian orphanage when her parents decided that they didn't want to raise a daughter with different leg lengths, webbed fingers, no thumbs and six toes on each foot. She spent the first two years of her life there subjected to beatings and often didn't have enough food to eat. After seeing a photo of Oksana, Gay Masters, a speech and language pathologist at the University of Louisiana, couldn't get her off her mind. She spent the next two years trying to adopt her. When Oksana finally arrived in the US, both of her legs were amputated, and her adoptive mother pushed her to try different sports. The result? Oksana won a bronze medal at the London 2012 Paralympic Games, then won silver and bronze medal in at the 2014 Games in Sochi, Russia, winning silver and bronze medals in cross-country skiing. She also cycles and is dating a man from the US Paralympic National Team. An anthropologist named Kenneth Good studied the Yanomami indigenous tribe of southern Venezuela during the 1970s. He learned to speak the native language and even married a tribal girl named Yarima. She eventually moved to the USA and had three children with him. The thing is that she felt lonely in New York City, and decided to return to the rainforest when the couple's eldest son, David, was just five years old. As one can imagine, David grew up to resent Yarima's actions, because he couldn't understand why she had abandoned him and his siblings. He read his father's memoirs about the Yanomami tribe and his mother and realized that he wanted to meet her. A three-day journey down the Orinoco River later, David arrived at his mother's village, reuniting with her for the first time in 20 years. Both mother and son cried. Nowadays, David studies the tribe and is proud to be half Yanomami. |
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