The Bear

1988 [FRENCH]

Action / Adventure / Drama / Family

20
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 88% · 16 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 82% · 5K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.7/10 10 19187 19.2K

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Plot summary

An orphan bear cub hooks up with an adult male as they try to dodge human hunters.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 24, 2018 at 03:13 PM

Top cast

Bart the Bear as The Kodiak Bear
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
842.86 MB
1280*544
French 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
Seeds 5
1.57 GB
1920*816
French 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 36 min
Seeds 11

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ElijahCSkuggs 9 / 10

Great film....

"The Bear" is a rare film when it comes to the ordinary cinema that we usually view. The main characters are animals, and the connection we get from them is something no human actor could emulate. The movie is expertly crafted, especially the direction and the cinematography. The animal trainers are in a class all their own, making everyone else involved with the film seemingly a lot less talented. The film, as previously said, isn't for children, despite the PG rating. It has a fair amount of blood, peril, sadness, and some bear sex! The film is great though, and I'm so glad I found it at Walfart on DVD for $5.50! *** 1/2

Reviewed by Agent10 8 / 10

I thought it was excellent when I was younger, its even better now that I am older

The Bear was an art film veiled in the guise of a nature film. I never looked at the roving vistas and sharp cinematography, because when I first watched this, I was more concerned with the bear cub. This is certainly a minimalist film, but the execution was so well done, the power of the images speaks more than the occasional piece of dialogue that is spoken throughout the movie. While it can never be described as kids movie, I think kids might be interested in it due to the very National Geographic-like quality of the film (only without the voice overs). While it has been a long time since I last watched this film (about four years ago), the interesting imagery and the simple, yet meaningful story of survival will always stick with me.

Reviewed by mark.waltz 8 / 10

This is about nothing more than surviving in the wild.

Years ago, someone asked the original creators of "Cats" if it was an analogy about the relationship between Queen Victoria and Disraeli. They responded coldly, "It's about cats". Certainly the animal could be changed in either that overrated musical or this brilliant French film about a bear cub and his desperate attempt to survive after the mother dies in a tragic accident. There are two hunters out on the trail for bears and their valuable skin, and the bear cub here, befriending an adult bear, learns how to survive. This however is not a film for children and that means for the segments in the middle that shows the older bear copulating.

Young children would probably be horrified by the amount of blood involving a dead horse and another one gravely wounded, and later in the film scenes with hunting dogs attacked by the older bear which is simply trying to get away from them and their humans. A scene with a gravely wounded dog whimpering in pain is very difficult to watch, mainly because you realize it is not the dog's fault but the hunters who are using them. The wounded horse profusely bleeding is another disturbing scene. In two scenes, the cub eats wild mushrooms, the first time hallucinating about scary looking frogs and then next time about a color changing butterfly.

If you don't quibble too much about the bears here possibly being wounded or abused while filming, you can really get into the story of the cub and the older bear who protects him. The cub licked the bigger bear's wounds after he was shot which could explain why the older bear didn't eat him. Of course the bear cub is adorable, the humans ruthless in their efforts to capture him (possibly to sell to a zoo or circus) and kill the bigger one. The bear squeals are a combination of delightful and silly, and it would be interesting to see a documentary showing the making of this where a human being tries to imitate a bear cub cry. Beautiful photography and a great musical score aides this in becoming a very good film, at least for those 12 and up. There is a reason why this wasn't rated G.

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