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Tribulations de deux oursons

Original title: Yellowstone Cubs
  • 1963
  • Approved
  • 48m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
340
YOUR RATING
Tribulations de deux oursons (1963)
Clip: Motorboat
Play clip1:06
Watch The Yellowstone Cubs
3 Videos
2 Photos
AdventureFamily

Two bear cubs, Tuffy and Tubby, are separated from their mother and spend an entire summer romping through Yellowstone National Park. In the meantime, the mother bear follows their trail as ... Read allTwo bear cubs, Tuffy and Tubby, are separated from their mother and spend an entire summer romping through Yellowstone National Park. In the meantime, the mother bear follows their trail as she searches for them.Two bear cubs, Tuffy and Tubby, are separated from their mother and spend an entire summer romping through Yellowstone National Park. In the meantime, the mother bear follows their trail as she searches for them.

  • Director
    • Charles L. Draper
  • Writer
    • Ralph Wright
  • Stars
    • Rex Allen
    • Joe Way
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    340
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles L. Draper
    • Writer
      • Ralph Wright
    • Stars
      • Rex Allen
      • Joe Way
    • 11User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos3

    The Yellowstone Cubs
    Clip 1:06
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    Clip 1:02
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    Clip 1:02
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    The Yellowstone Cubs
    Clip 2:05
    The Yellowstone Cubs

    Photos1

    View Poster

    Top cast2

    Edit
    Rex Allen
    Rex Allen
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Joe Way
    • Joe the Ranger
    • Director
      • Charles L. Draper
    • Writer
      • Ralph Wright
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.7340
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    Featured reviews

    8honyoker-1

    My Family was in this movie

    While watching the Sunday Disney Movie one evening, our dad jumped up and yelled the "There's the 'Diaper Daddy' (dad always gave his vehicles names - from 1959 to 1964 he had at least 2 kids in diapers)! There in the background, was our red Chevy station wagon driving past with a large piece of plastic flapping in the wind. A couple of summers prior, we went on vacation, traveling from Valentine, Nebraska to Seattle Washington, stopping various places, including Yellowstone to see 'Old Faithful'. It seems that we were stopping at least once a day during the trip to re-tie the plastic to keep our luggage dry. By the time the movie had gone from the theater to the television, it had been a couple of years and we no longer had 'Diaper Daddy' and was driving 'Tator digger' because it bottomed out every time it hit a bump in the road. Bob C. Hookham
    9ducatimatz28

    Yellowstone Memories

    The Yellowstone Cubs Documentary really brought back Memories of My Family visiting the Park every year starting in the 1950's onward. I was around 5yrs old on my 1st visit around 1955. The Entrance Fee into the Park shown in the Film (1963) was pretty cheap at $3.00 compared to Today. I just looked up the present fees Private Non-commercial Vehicle $ 35.00 (valid for 7 days)Motorcycle, Snowmobile $ 30.00 (valid for 7 days) Single Entry (foot, bike, ski, 16+ years old)$ 20.00 (valid for 7 days) and these costs are half the days of the 1963 Fees(15 days) Just like in the Film back in the Day, The Bears were on the Roadways waiting for the Cars; Even though you weren't suppose to Feed them, everyone did, especially when Cubs were present. Many people seem to think these were tame animals and would get up close for Photos, Some Dumb Mothers actually Putting their Children on the Bear for a Photo. There were lots of these Small little Cabins to stay at in the Park. I can remember them having Small heating Stoves with a Few Presto Logs next to them.

    The Old Faithful Inn which was built in 1904 still exists today. It has 327 Rooms and is open from May to October. Old Faithful Geyser has always amazed me that it still reaches the same height or close every time it erupts. Discovered in 1870 by the Washburn Expedition it has erupted for Centuries possibly since time began. When the 1959 Earthquake happen in the Park it changed a number of Things. Geysers that hadn't worked in a Century started working again and new ones started up. It is said that Yellowstone Park sits above the Largest Volcano in the World and if it went off has the Destructive Force many times larger of the Atomic Bombs dropped on Japan in WW2, Hopefully this never happens! Anyone that visits the Park especially those that live in large cramped Metropolitan Areas will marvel at it's wide open Space and Beauty. Now days when you travel through the Park you won't see Bears on the Roadways, You Might see Elk resting on the side of the Roads or an Occasional Buffalo or Moose crossing the Road. Still a thrill for a 1st timer to the Park but nothing like it was when I was a Kid, so it makes me Glad I was born at a time to see what was in the Film and more...
    8mccgarden

    First hand report

    I was in this movie, it was interesting to see how it was developed. Many of the scenes were shot at Old Faithful Inn and in the surrounding areas. A long piano playing scene in the Inn was not used. One of my scenes showed me putting up a tent at the bottom of a hill and at the edge of a lake. This site was not far from the Old Faithful Inn. Two different hills were used for the filming. Sometimes the trailer was towed down a trail and the crew would pitch a log under the trailer to make it bounce, and the girls would throw things after the trailer. I did not like the 2nd site as it was steeper, and the loose trailer came at me very fast. I had to jump out of the way. On the last filming I dived in the water. I lost the hammer. I did not know that I could dive like that until I saw the movie when it played in Pocatello, Idaho. The grass had been sprayed green and there was ice on the water. The cast would go to a rangers cabin where a nearby hot pool could be used for bathing. The last time we went, I said, "We must be crazy, we're taking our clothes off in a blizzard." Many Yellowstone park savages (employees) were in the movie. I bought Chuck Draper a cowboy hat. MCCGARDEN@COMCAST.NET The scene noted by another reviewer where the bears tear up the kitchen was a re-shoot for more footage of destruction. A total of eight cubs was used to get the cub scenes. I think the Old Faithful employee kitchen area was used for filming.
    6planktonrules

    A look at a bygone ere for bears at Yellowstone...thank goodness.

    I have been to Yellowstone National Park twice and spent a lot of time in there...and loved every minute of it. However, although we spend a total of about 2-3 weeks there, we only very rarely saw any bears. This isn't a complaint but I am mentioning this because the bears and the way they acted in "Yellowstone Cubs" is clearly an antique...and such bear/human interactions simply don't take place there today like they did in this film. In the film, you see idiots actually hand feeding and even kissing wild black bears!!!! Not surprisingly, sometimes the bears ripped people's faces off....and eventually the Park Service changed the rules and clamped down on such idiotic behaviors by people. Seeing the stupid folks standing only inches from these wild animals will probably cause your blood pressure to shoot up a few hundred points!! I know that my daughter was angry as she watched the people behaving horribly.

    When the story begins, you see a large mother black bear and her two cubs, who the narrator dubbed Tubby and Tuffy. They seem pretty cute and watching them scampering about is pretty entertaining. Soon, however, the park is open for the season and that's when the problems start. Idiotic people start interacting with them and eventually the two cubs are separated from their mother due to a really moronic family that decided to hand-feed the mother...as the cubs climb into the people's trailer. Soon the cubs find themselves at a camp ground and they run amok. Will they ever find their mother??

    This film is an antique in many ways. I mentioned how in the old days, folks foolishly interacted with bears. This, fortunately has stopped...though I have still recently seen folks standing only a couple feet from Bison and Big Horn Sheep at the park!! The other way it's an antique is that instead of being a documentary about wildlife, the film is heavily orchestrated...placing bears around people and situations and creating a story around it. They anthropomorphize the bears--making them seem human-like in their actions and naming them furthers this outdated method of filmmaking. It's also horrifying that they likely placed the bears around various geothermals or ate movie film in order to make the film look cool! Or, if they didn't place them there, instead of shooing them away, they let the cubs muck about the mud pots and steam (which could have scalded them) and campgrounds! Crazy, huh?!

    So is this worth seeing? Well, yes and no. It is a great look at the bad old days of human-bear interaction. You can see people (and even a ranger) doing some VERY stupid things with the bears! You'll likely be shocked as you watch. But it also isn't all that educational as instead of learning about bears and their behaviors in the wild, it's more about telling a story and entertaining. Very 1963 in its sensibilities but still worth seeing...particularly if you are planning on visiting our national parks, particularly Yellowstone.

    By the way, for fun, show this film to park rangers and watch them to see if they have strokes or heart attacks! I am sure, at the very least, you'll hear an ear-full from them about the filmmakers and the crazy things they did with wild animals to make this movie 'more entertaining'.
    8RosanaBotafogo

    How cute...

    How cute, I didn't know if it's based on some real fact, probably not, for lack of source, but it's certainly common at the time, family of bears being separated and annihilated for "attacking" humans, and the main thing is the irresponsibility of families that feed animals wild (I've already done that and it saddens me to remember)...

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Released as part of a double-feature bill with Disney's Sam l'intrépide (1963).
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Narrator: High in the northern half of western United States, the Rocky Mountains rise more than 8,000 feet to form the Continental Divide. Here lies some 2 million acres of natural wonders: Yellastone National Park. At this altitude, winter comes early. By mid November, the entrance gates are deserted and the park is empty. In Yellastone, only the geysers are active. Every 64 and 1/2 minutes, Old Faithful geyser sends a cloud plume 150 feet into the air, and the steam from 10,000 lesser geysers drifts through the winter-bound silence. By late May, the snow is gone from the land, and now the park begins to stir with life.

    • Connections
      Edited into Le monde merveilleux de Disney: The Yellowstone Cubs (1965)
    • Soundtracks
      Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah
      Music by Allie Wrubel

      Lyrics by Ray Gilbert

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 1, 1963 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Yellowstone Cubs
    • Filming locations
      • Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
    • Production company
      • Walt Disney Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 48m

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