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Brother Bear

Brother Bear is an animated film produced by Walt Disney Pictures and released on November 1, 2003. In it, an Inuit boy pursues a bear in revenge for a battle with it he provoked in which his oldest brother is killed. He tracks down the bear down and kills it, but the Spirits, angered by this needless death, change the boy into a bear himself as punishment. Originally titled Bears, it was the third and final Disney animated feature produced primarily at its animation studio at Disney-MGM Studios in Orlando, Florida; the studio was closed a few months after the release of this film.

Contents

Plot

Long ago in a post-Ice Age land when mammoths still live, there are three brothers named Kenai, Denahi, and Sitka. Denahi, the middle brother, and Sitka, the oldest, work hard. They think Kenai should work more and play less. Kenai, the youngest, hates bears because they fight for the same food, overtake the land, ransack his village and ruin his coming-of-age ceremony. Each brother is given his own totem: Sitka, the eagle of guidance; Denahi, the wolf of wisdom; and Kenai, the bear of love. Kenai scorns the totem he has been given, believing that love is not brave or noble.

When Sitka is killed in a battle with a bear that Kenai provoked, Tanana, the tribal shaman, officiates a funeral rite for Sitka. Suddenly Kenai ignores the village teachings of brotherhood with animals and sets out to hunt the bear for revenge and eventually kills it. To punish Kenai, the Great Spirits, represented by the spirit of Sitka, transform him into a bear. Unfortunately his other brother, who was pursuing Kenai to stop him, doesn't realize what has happened. He finds Kenai's torn clothes and believes the bear took his brother's life. In grief, he vows revenge.

Disoriented and barely escaping Denahi's wrath by falling into the river, Kenai awakens on the shore and in the presence of Tanana, who eases him through his initial shock at his change. Although she cannot understand his bear speech, she advises Kenai to find where the lights touch the mountain so that he can ask Sitka's spirit to change him back, and then she disappears without giving him directions. To Kenai's surprise, he finds he can talk with the other animals - but the only animals who are willing to talk to him are two stupid sibling moose, Rutt and Tuke, who are more interested in cracking jokes at Kenai's claims to be a man than helping him. Along the way, Kenai meets a talkative, pesky bear cub named Koda, who claims to know the way to the salmon run where the bears gather to fish and where the lights seem to hug the mountain.

What follows is a journey in which Kenai, when not dodging Denahi who is now hunting him, grows rather fond of the irrepressible Koda whom he learns shares his spiritual beliefs. This in turn puts his hatred of bears in a stark perspective that forces him to reconsider, especially when he learns that Koda sees humans as the same sort of dangerous monsters as he himself once believed bears to be. This culminates when they finally reach the salmon run and Kenai has the awkward experience of being surrounded by bears. Yet, the bears quickly accept him and he in turn learns about the loving community of these animals that makes his hate seem so foolish even as he learns to enjoy himself.

This contentment is shattered when Koda tells the story of his separation from his mother. Kenai is aghast to realize the story is about the fight he and his brothers had with the killer bear. It immediately dawns on Kenai that he killed himself Koda's mother. In shame at profoundly harming a cub he has grown to love, Kenai flees the gathering, but Koda follows and asks what's wrong. With great remorse, Kenai confesses that he is responsible for the death of Koda's mother. Koda is distraught and runs away in grief, loss, and betrayal while ignoring Kenai's apologies and pleas for forgiveness.

With nothing left to keep him with the bears, Kenai scales the mountain to contact the spirit of Sitka. Koda mourns alone, but then has a chance encounter with the squabbling Tuke and Rutt who reconcile because of their brotherhood, which makes Koda realize the importance of his relationship with Kenai. Meanwhile, Denahi finally tracks down Kenai; in the ensuing fight, Koda, having forgiven Kenai, rushes in to help at a critical moment in the fight. Kenai struggles to protect Koda and is willing to sacrifice himself to save the cub, much as Koda's mother had done; with this selfless act, Kenai shows the spirits that he has profoundly changed for the better and they allow Sitka to change Kenai back into a human.

Yet, while Kenai revels at his regained humanity, he realizes that he can no longer talk with Koda, a cub who is now orphaned yet again by the bear he had begun to accept as a brother. Rather than abandon Koda, Kenai asks Sitka to change him back into a bear. With Denahi's support, the pleased Sitka grants his brother's request while Koda enjoys one last moment with his mother bear's spirit.

The film ends with Kenai, as a bear and accompanied by Koda, being welcomed back by his tribe and pressing his pawprint to the cave wall which bears the handprints of countless generations of other tribe members who also fulfilled the calling of their totem animals.

Critical reaction

The reaction from film reviewers was severely mixed with many panning the film as a retread of older Disney films like The Lion King and the 20th Century Fox film, Ice Age, while others defended the film as a legitimate variation of the theme.

The American reaction to the film revealed a sharp difference of opinion between Christian fundamentalists and the rest of society. The fundamentalist reviewers attacked the film as immoral for presenting a story world of divine spirits and promoting the idea of the fundamental spiritual equality of humanity and animals which was at odds with the Bible. On the other hand, The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops praised the film as extolling a philosophy similar to St. Francis of Assisi. In addition, secular critics who liked the film praised its story as a very moral work with messages about forgiveness, empathy, and brotherhood.

Box office

One would judge, by overlooking Disney's heavily lackluster marketing for the film, that the studio had low expectations for it after the spectacular financial disappointment of Treasure Planet. Although amassing just $85,336,277 in its theatrical run, a rather average amount of money, it was not a flop by any measure, especially considering what little marketing the movie received even on children's television channels. The Orlando, Florida animation studio where the film was animated had been shuttered shortly after the release of the film, as an extreme example of dire assumptions.

However, Brother Bear went on to prove to be a big hit around the world, amassing $164,700,000, more in worldwide box office than fellow Walt Disney Florida Animation film Lilo and Stitch, bringing its worldwide total to a pretty massive $250,036,277 currently. In addition, its DVD release was successful as well with the film being a strong seller. It has to date amassed more than 165 million sales on DVD and VHS sales alone!

Voice cast

The movie stars the voices of:

  • Joaquin Phoenix as Kenai, the youngest of three brothers who gets turned into a bear
  • Jeremy Suarez as Koda, a bear cub who believes Kenai hunted his mother
  • Rick Moranis as Rutt, a comic Canadian moose
  • Dave Thomas as Tuke, another comic Canadian moose
  • Jason Raize as Denahi, the middle brother
  • D.B. Sweeney as Sitka, the oldest brother
  • Joan Copeland as Tanana, the shaman of Kenai's tribe
  • Michael Clarke Duncan as Tug, a wise old bear

Pronunciation guide

  • Kenai = KEY-nigh
  • Koda = KO-duh
  • Rutt = rut
  • Tuke = tuque
  • Denahi = duh-NAH-hee
  • Sitka = SIT-ka
  • Tanana = tah-NAH-nah
  • Tug = tug

Songs

  • "Great Spirits", performed by Tina Turner
  • "On My Way", performed by Phil Collins
  • "On My Way (Koda's Version)", performed by Koda (Jeremy Suarez )
  • "No Way Out (Theme)", performed by Phil Collins
  • "Look Through My Eyes", performed by Phil Collins
  • "Transformation", performed by Phil Collins
  • "Welcome", performed by Phil Collins
  • "Three Brothers", performed by Mark Mancina
  • "Wakes As a Bear", performed by Mark Mancina
  • "Wilderness of Danger and Beauty", performed by Mark Mancina

External links

  • Brother Bear Official Site http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/brotherbear/main.html
  • Brother Bear http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0328880/ at the Internet Movie Database
  • Brother Bear http://www.bcdb.com/bcdb/cartoon.cgi?film=23326&cartoon=Brother%20Bear at the Big Cartoon DataBase


Last updated: 02-10-2005 23:13:54
Last updated: 03-02-2005 05:56:50