IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
1971
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuTwo narratives -- the life cycle of a mother walrus and her calf, and the life of a polar bear and her cubs -- are used to illustrate the harsh realities of existence in the Arctic.Two narratives -- the life cycle of a mother walrus and her calf, and the life of a polar bear and her cubs -- are used to illustrate the harsh realities of existence in the Arctic.Two narratives -- the life cycle of a mother walrus and her calf, and the life of a polar bear and her cubs -- are used to illustrate the harsh realities of existence in the Arctic.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Queen Latifah
- Narrator
- (Synchronisation)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I watched this film at the Seattle International Film Festival; it is a beautifully made documentary on life in the Arctic. The filmmakers followed the life of a Polar Bear cub and a Walrus as they learn about life from their mothers and have to deal with the catastrophic changes in the Arctic Weather caused by Global Warming. The film has a broad appeal, particularly amongst Children, who will find the movie funny, exciting, sad, and touching quite a few people in the movie theater were sobbing by the end. This fits well with "March of the Penguins" in the way it "dramatizes" the footage and humanizes the wild animals, however it does this in a way that serves the story and helps people sympathize with the plight of the Arctic Wildlife.
On the land of the Arctic, animals have to fight the cold and lack of food. They hunt, nest and reproduce. We see the loving interaction and teaching skills between polar bear mothers and babies, and walrus mothers take good care of their babies. Global warming has caused baby polar bear Nanu to struggle to survive the lack of food, warning us to protect the environment and protect the homes of Arctic animals.
10adamrav
The movie is all real, and based on 15 years of experience and observation in the Arctic. Everything in the movie has been fact checked in three separate sources by National Geographic, who demands strict scrutiny. The movie will make you laugh and cry. It educates and entertains. It is a fine story. Queen Latifah delivers her narration very straight. she is warm and funny. The movie is different then what your used to because it presents itself as a story, it reveals itself from the point of view of the animals like a story book. It does not stop the story to describe scientific facts and explanations, instead the facts and information are part of the story naturally. This allows the film to tell a story that involves it's audience, putting them into the here and now with the animals.
This movie is designed for young people and families. Just because it does not use scientific language that would clutter the beautiful imagery does not mean that the story is not authentic.
gather up some kids and go to Arctic tale. You will be moved by this movie.
This movie is designed for young people and families. Just because it does not use scientific language that would clutter the beautiful imagery does not mean that the story is not authentic.
gather up some kids and go to Arctic tale. You will be moved by this movie.
National Geographic does a documentary with a good dose of cutesy storytelling from the Queen Latifah narration. It starts with a momma polar bear and her two cubs emerging from their den for the first time. They have to navigate the new climate along side a baby walrus within its herd. It's nothing new to tell a nature story from a humanistic manner. Sometimes, it works well like the death of the cub. Other times, it's rather too cute. On that note, I don't like Queen Latifah's narration. It may be old fashion but nature documentaries always sounds better British. I also don't like the music which has singing in it. When it gets to a fart fest, the show takes a giant step down. I appreciate the attempt at something new but most of this is rubbing me the wrong way.
'Arctic Tale' for me was very difficult to rate and review. There was no doubt about me seeing it in the first place, being a long-term lover of documentaries and loving the animals included and depicted. The Arctic is a very familiar habitat in documentaries with it being explored frequently, but never feels old because it and its inhabitants (also frequently seen) are timeless. Queen Latifah is a bit take and leave for me and part of me thought is she a good fit.
Seeing 'Arctic Tale', it is a long way from bad. There are many fantastic things here and much of the footage is captivating, not to mention that it is impeccably made. 'Arctic Tale' also struck me as wildly uneven, with the narration (writing more than the delivery actually), music and the uncertain target audience being issues. It is a long way from being one of the best nature documentaries out there and is not a milestone, but it is also a long way from being one of the worst and there is no doubt that it had very good intentions.
Will start with what 'Arctic Tale' does well, which is a lot. The production values are absolutely impeccable all round. This is another fine example of an environment that is exquisite to look at but very harsh with its challenges, photographed vividly and beautifully. This is much more than cute animals in beautiful environments like the advertising may suggest. Absolutely loved the animals, which were a great mix of adorable, sympathetic and dangerous. Celia is impossible to resist and any scene depicting any kind of parental love is enough to warm the heart, will agree that the male polar bear veers on the sadistic side but not in a way that unbalances things.
The footage takes the breath away, evoking a wide range of emotions while also being educational (if not innovative). Did appreciate that it didn't have human scenes that choppily interrupted the flow, and appreciated too that it did address the issues with global warming and its consequences (though it could have gone further with it). This is actually very important to address and to me it does need to be addressed more if some are seemingly not taking its seriousness in. The story is very cute and touching, making one effortlessly root for the animals. While the narration was patchy in writing, Latifah actually brings sass and sympathetic edge to the delivery.
For my tastes though, the writing of the narration was too schmaltzy and tried too hard to be hip with some now very outdated language, there are also parts where it felt on the preachy side and that there could have been a lot less of it. As a result it did make me question the target audience, there are times where it does have story content that aims and does succeed in doing so in being accessible to children and then has information in terminology and tone that is more understandable for adults.
Didn't care for the music that much either, it was too overpowering, occasionally spelled out the emotions too much and needed a gentler touch to fit more with the more intimate parts rather than one that was trying to be more cinematic than needed. It was also too modern and like an attempt to appeal to a wider audience or something. Also thought that 'Arctic Tale' plays it too safe, the conflict could have been bigger and bolder (not enough of the pull no punches approach here) and there is a sense that it was trying to be careful not to offend. Admirable but it did mean that in terms of exploring the facts properly and addressing the global warming it was a bit too sketchy.
In conclusion, beautifully made and well intentioned but doesn't quite reach full potential. 6/10.
Seeing 'Arctic Tale', it is a long way from bad. There are many fantastic things here and much of the footage is captivating, not to mention that it is impeccably made. 'Arctic Tale' also struck me as wildly uneven, with the narration (writing more than the delivery actually), music and the uncertain target audience being issues. It is a long way from being one of the best nature documentaries out there and is not a milestone, but it is also a long way from being one of the worst and there is no doubt that it had very good intentions.
Will start with what 'Arctic Tale' does well, which is a lot. The production values are absolutely impeccable all round. This is another fine example of an environment that is exquisite to look at but very harsh with its challenges, photographed vividly and beautifully. This is much more than cute animals in beautiful environments like the advertising may suggest. Absolutely loved the animals, which were a great mix of adorable, sympathetic and dangerous. Celia is impossible to resist and any scene depicting any kind of parental love is enough to warm the heart, will agree that the male polar bear veers on the sadistic side but not in a way that unbalances things.
The footage takes the breath away, evoking a wide range of emotions while also being educational (if not innovative). Did appreciate that it didn't have human scenes that choppily interrupted the flow, and appreciated too that it did address the issues with global warming and its consequences (though it could have gone further with it). This is actually very important to address and to me it does need to be addressed more if some are seemingly not taking its seriousness in. The story is very cute and touching, making one effortlessly root for the animals. While the narration was patchy in writing, Latifah actually brings sass and sympathetic edge to the delivery.
For my tastes though, the writing of the narration was too schmaltzy and tried too hard to be hip with some now very outdated language, there are also parts where it felt on the preachy side and that there could have been a lot less of it. As a result it did make me question the target audience, there are times where it does have story content that aims and does succeed in doing so in being accessible to children and then has information in terminology and tone that is more understandable for adults.
Didn't care for the music that much either, it was too overpowering, occasionally spelled out the emotions too much and needed a gentler touch to fit more with the more intimate parts rather than one that was trying to be more cinematic than needed. It was also too modern and like an attempt to appeal to a wider audience or something. Also thought that 'Arctic Tale' plays it too safe, the conflict could have been bigger and bolder (not enough of the pull no punches approach here) and there is a sense that it was trying to be careful not to offend. Admirable but it did mean that in terms of exploring the facts properly and addressing the global warming it was a bit too sketchy.
In conclusion, beautifully made and well intentioned but doesn't quite reach full potential. 6/10.
Wusstest du schon
- SoundtracksLive Let Live
Written by Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks
Performed by Brian Wilson
Executive Produced by Ralph Sall
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Arctic Tale
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 833.532 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 22.607 $
- 29. Juli 2007
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 1.864.636 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 26 Min.(86 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
- 576i (SDTV)
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