Andrew L. wrote:I definitely experienced a few chills thinking back to my own bear encounters.
You can't just leave it at that. You just can't.
Please elaborate.
Moderator: Greg
Andrew L. wrote:I definitely experienced a few chills thinking back to my own bear encounters.
sunlore wrote:Andrew L. wrote:
I definitely experienced a few chills thinking back to my own bear encounters.
You can't just leave it at that. You just can't.
Please elaborate.
Andrew L. wrote:sunlore wrote:Andrew L. wrote:
I definitely experienced a few chills thinking back to my own bear encounters.
You can't just leave it at that. You just can't.
Please elaborate.
There's not much to tell. I've spent 5 summers in the bush (northern BC) working as a treeplanter. You find yourself in the middle of nowhere and in close proximity to bears quite regularly. Last year I completely lost count of how many black bears I saw. They were everywhere.
Notable encounters:
-- bluff-charged by a black bear on a logging road (it stopped and turned about 50 meters from me; I stood my ground)
-- black bear crawls through window of empty truck to eat foreman's lunch (alerts us to this fact by leaning on the horn with its ass)
-- awoken by sound of insane shouting in French and barking dogs 20 feet away as a black bear is chased out of camp after trampling my neighbour's tent
-- stuck at the bottom of a wickedly steep and slashy (stacks of intersecting fallen trees) cutblock waiting for a grizzly to mosey on. This was my closest encounter with a grizzly. Very cool. It wasn't scary as the grizzly knew I was there, didn't seem to have cubs, and didn't seem to care about me.
I've seen two white grizzlies at a distance, too.
Andrew L. wrote:Did no one else think that some of Herzog's narration was trite and predictable at times? The bit about the striated glacial/ice formations mapping Treadwell's soul?
If I believed in the devil, I would say the devil is right here. The jungle means fornication and asphyxiation and fighting for survival and growing and rotting away...an overwhelming lack of order—even the stars up here look like a mess...There is some sort of harmony: it is the harmony of overwhelming and collective murder.
Andrew L. wrote:
For anyone interested in bear attacks, I highly recommend Stephen Herrero's definitive book on the subject.
Cranius wrote:I thought it interesting that Herzog's verdict on Treadwell was very similar to his observations on Klaus Kinksi in My Best Fiend. There's a good bit in that documentary where he accuses Kinski of having insidious ideas about nature and delivers a monologue to camera, on the set of Aguirre, about how he sees nature (the jungle):
If I believed in the devil, I would say the devil is right here. The jungle means fornication and asphyxiation and fighting for survival and growing and rotting away...an overwhelming lack of order—even the stars up here look like a mess...There is some sort of harmony: it is the harmony of overwhelming and collective murder.
full point wrote:Just saw it last night.
Great movie.
Was it me or did everyone in that movie seem a bit odd?
The coroner, Tim's ex-girlfriend, his parents..........
They all seemed to have strange "Kubrick-ian" quirks that almost seemed scripted. (I realize they weren't but, man.....so strange).
I think Tim knew that the longer he "coexisted" with the bears his luck would eventually run out. I think the real world was too much for him and his staying in the maze longer than normal was just a gamble he took on death. Seems like the summers he was there before he seemed aware that the odds were in his favor. The last one seemed to have the odds stacked in death's favor. And he knew it.
Not crap.
Andrew L. wrote:Did no one else think that some of Herzog's narration was trite and predictable at times? The bit about the striated glacial/ice formations mapping Treadwell's soul? Lame.
greg wrote:If I didn't know the story, and the bears were a little more fake looking, I would have thought it was a new Christopher Guest movie.
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