I finally took the family to see the documentary that all the culturati are  playing up as superior to "March of the Penguins." It's not, but it's  amusing. It's the story of Timothy Treadwell, a manic-depressive failed TV actor  who became an alcoholic after losing out to Woody Harrelson for the dumb  bartender role on "Cheers." He started camping in grizzly bear country  in Alaska each summer. Unlike the black bears of the Lower 48, who aren't  terribly dangerous unless provoked, the huge brown bears of Alaska are erratic  and can be lethal on a whim. Nobody in his right mind spends a lot of time in  grizzly country without a rifle by his side.
Treadwell wasn't particularly sane, so he spent 13 unarmed summers making  friends with the grizzlies, getting to the point where he could touch some of  his old acquaintances on the nose. He also made friends with a family of foxes,  who'd follow him around like dogs. The animals apparently found him harmless.  His communing with the brutes helped him get off alcohol and drugs.
He shot 100 hours of video, but apparently he wasn't all that interested in  traditional nature documentary footage. Most of the footage, at least as shown  in the movie, consisted of him standing in front of a camera on a tripod,  talking about himself and his grandiose psychodramas, with grizzlies as  background. Finally, he stayed an extra week one fall, after all the bears he  knew had gone into hibernations, and he and his girlfriend were devoured by a  newcomer, an old and extremely hungry bear.
It's a pretty silly story, and isn't helped by German director Werner Herzog's  narration, which is in a sort of Schopenhauer-for-Sophomores vein: "But ze  uniwerse is actually cold und cruel, und, zus, he vas eaden by a bear." (Or  words to that effect. It's weird how all Germans these days strike us as  sounding exactly like Ah-nold.)
Personally, though, I can relate to Treadwell: I'd like to make friends with  bears and foxes, too. Once in Alaska, I spent 45 minutes stalking a female  caribou just to see how close I could get. By moving slowly and reassuringly  from the upwind side, I got to within five feet of the 200-pound beast. It was  quite exhilarating. I haven't done much hunting, but I imagine the thrill is  tied into our heritage as hunters.
Rated R for bad language.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment