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- LETTERS, Page 6Bearing It
-
- In describing the movie The Bear, based on James Oliver
- Curwood's book The Grizzly King, you refer to a cub's attempts
- to attach itself to a full-grown male bear as a
- protector-mentor (CINEMA, Oct. 30). This would be unusual
- because it is not uncommon for male grizzly bears to kill and
- even eat unprotected cubs. This behavior may seem savage or even
- bizarre, but to the great bear it is the natural order of
- things. A more accurate film would show the orphaned cub
- attempting (probably unsuccessfully) to elude the deadly,
- mature, solitary male. Granted, cinema often diverges from
- reality, but to offer the insipid scenario of a mature male
- protector bear violates the integrity of both humans and
- grizzlies. This movie portrays the wilderness with a kind of
- Disney Bambi mentality. A more realistic, less idealistic
- understanding of our natural world is critical to the better
- management of our dwindling resources.
-
- Dave Stricklan, Wildlife Biologist USDA Forest Service
- Halsey, Neb.
-
- You report that British Columbia was considered "no longer
- wild and woolly enough" as a setting in which to film The Bear.
- Whom are you kidding? How many wild grizzly bears are roaming
- around the movie's location site of the Bavarian Alps? There are
- thousands of grizzlies in B.C.
-
- Keith Millar Scottsdale, Ariz.
-