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Grizzly Man (2005)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
7 December 2005 (France) moreTagline:
In nature, there are boundaries. morePlot:
A devastating and heartrending take on grizzly bear activists Timothy Treadwell and Amie Huguenard, who were killed in October of 2003 while living among grizzlies in Alaska. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
12 wins & 6 nominations moreNewsDesk:
(11 articles)
Herzog Honoured By Documentary Makers (From WENN. 7 October 2008, 9:10 AM, PDT)
Herzog and the forms of madness (From Roger Ebert's Blog. 20 July 2008, 2:24 PM, PDT)
User Comments:
A Perfect Match moreCast
(Credited cast)| Werner Herzog | ... | Himself / Narrator / Interviewer (voice) | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Carol Dexter | ... | Herself, Treadwell's mother | |
| Val Dexter | ... | Himself, Treadwell's father | |
| Sam Egli | ... | Himself (Egli Air Haul) | |
| Franc G. Fallico | ... | Himself (Coroner) | |
| Willy Fulton | ... | Himself, pilot | |
| Marc Gaede | ... | Himself (Ecologist) | |
| Marnie Gaede | ... | Herself (Ecologist) | |
| Sven Haakanson Jr. | ... | Himself, Alutiiq Museum Director | |
| Amie Huguenard | ... | Herself (archive footage) | |
| David Letterman | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Jewel Palovak | ... | Herself | |
| Kathleen Parker | ... | Herself (Close Friend) | |
| Warren Queeney | ... | Himself (Actor, Close Friend) | |
| Timothy Treadwell | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Larry Van Daele | ... | Himself, bear biologist | |
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Additional Details
MPAA:
Rated R for language.Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
USA:103 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Dolby DigitalCertification:
Netherlands:AL | UK:15 | Canada:14A (Alberta/British Columbia/Ontario) | Canada:G (Québec) | Sweden:15 | Australia:M | Finland:K-7 | Singapore:NC-16 | USA:R | South Africa:13LFilming Locations:
Katmai National Park, Alaska, USAMOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
During a BBC interview about the film, Werner Herzog was shot with an air rifle. The interview was resumed indoors and at the end Herzog was encouraged to check his wound. Though there was "a bruise the size of a snooker ball, with a hole in it." Herzog declared "It was not a significant bullet. I am not afraid." moreQuotes:
Timothy Treadwell: Oh my gosh! The bear, Miss Chocolate, has left me her poop! It's her crap! It was just in her butt and it's still warm! This is a gift from Miss Chocolate! moreSoundtrack:
Coyotes moreFAQ
Do we hear the recording of the attack?Why didn't Herzog air the tape?
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Anyone who has followed the trajectory of Werner Herzog from the time of "Even Dwarfs Started Small" will understand the immediate appeal that the Treadwell story must have had for this intensely brilliant German director. Treadwell must have seemed to Herzog like a Laguna Beach version of his Fitzcarraldo and his Aguirre and even of Herzog himself in his more unhinged moments. This film appears at first to be a fair minded documentary about Tim Treadwell, the 'protector' of all things natural and wild in the remote regions of Alaska. What Herzog shows us, however, is that what Treadwell really needed protection from was reality itself and that his escape into the wilds was just a deadly game of denial.
The film is also a meditation on the brute force of nature, on art and on human hubris. My wife found the 'character' of Tim Treadwell so ludicrous and offensive that she had to leave the theater. For my part, I was in awe of both Treadwell's incredible physical courage coupled with his absolute lack of judgment and his insane narcissism. He struck me as a cross between Pee-Wee Herman and Marlon Perkins, the guy who narrated the Mutual of Omaha nature documentaries that showed up on Sunday afternoons in the 60's and 70's.
The word is that Hollywood, in the person of Leonardo DiCaprio, was a financial supporter of Treadwell's 'mission'in Alaska and that a Hollywood version of the story is due out sometime soon with Di Caprio playing the lead. I know I won't be going to see that version because it will just continue the lie and the myth that Treadwell tried so hard to create and sustain. Even at his most intense moments of profoundity Treadwell had nothing to 'say' to anyone about either bears or himself. It was all self-serving and self-congratulatory and it is only in his grotesque death at the hands of a rogue grizzly that any meaningful message finally comes across. (Herzog thankfully spares us from the actual experience which was caught on audio but not on video because the lens cap had been left on.)
Its hard not to feel sorry for Tim Treadwell and the young woman who died with him, but the 'native' scientist in the film put it quite nicely "My people have been living nicely with bears for thousands of years and we know enough to stay out of each other's way."
Tim Treadwell wanted desperately to cross the boundary into the 'way' of the bear because the 'way of the human' was too much for him. Despite his goofy, childish demeanor he revealed himself to be a man of deep anger and resentment. However, if the bears had let him live he would probably be considered something of a folk-hero in 'reality' obsessed America.
Herzog shows us that there was nothing real about Treadwell at all and that the bears knew a lot more about him than he ever would of them.