Film Review
L'Ours (a.k.a.
The Bear) is a solemn but
extraordinarily moving meditation on mankind's relationship with the
natural world that is both captivating and thought-provoking.
With an almost childlike simplicity, it confronts us with the mindless
cruelty that man routinely metes out to wild animals and entreats us to
show nature greater respect. As on his previous
La
Guerre du feu (1981), director Jean-Jacques Annaud tells a
compelling and humane story with minimal dialogue, relying mainly on
strong visual images to engage the spectator. The film is
cleverly shot so that most of the story is seen from the perspective of
an unimaginably cute bear cub, including his dreams and a weird
hallucinogenic experience that follows a breakfast of magic
mushrooms. Humour and tragedy are expertly intertwined in a
beguiling and unpretentious morality tale that has universal appeal and lasting impact.
A huge international box office success,
L'Ours attracted a massive audience
of over nine million in France alone, securing its place in the top
twenty most commercially successful French films. A modern fable
with a powerful pro-environment message (which is just as relevant
today as it was when it was first seen), the film is especially
appealing to children, although its uncompromising realism makes it a
somewhat more challenging proposition than comparable nature offerings
from the sanitised world of Disney. For an adult viewer,
the film also has considerable charm and offers a potent reminder of
the immense beauty of the natural world and our obligation to preserve
it for future generations.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Jacques Annaud film:
L'Amant (1992)
Film Synopsis
British Columbia, 1885. When his mother is killed in a rock-fall,
a young bear cub must learn to fend for himself. The cub
attempts to befriend a giant grizzly bear, but the latter, irritated by
the youngster's attentions, pushes him away. After the grizzly is
attacked by two hunters, the bear cub comes to his rescue, helping to
lick his wounds. Bear and cub form a natural bond, which the
hunters plan to exploit to lure the grizzly into a trap...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.