Part punk wildlife doc, part diary of a twisted soul, part cautionary tale, Grizzly Man is a complex, unique and engrossing journey into the murky recesses of an unhinged mind.
Grizzly Man (2005)
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Education/General Interest
Producer: Bill Campbell, Kevin L. Beggs, Phil Fairclough, Andrea Meditch, Erik Nelson, Tom Ortenberg
Composer: Richard Thompson
DVD Info
Release:
Feb 12, 2007
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case / Box Set
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 16:9
- Widescreen - 1.85
- Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Closed Captioned - English
- Subtitles - Spanish - optional
Additional Release Material:
- Making of - In the Edges: The GRIZZLY MAN Music Session
- Production Interviews - Werner Hertzog - Director
Reviews
Fascinating as both nature documentary and as a portrait of a narcissistic monomaniac, utterly in keeping with Herzogian type.
He was enough of an amateur to be relaxed and unselfconscious, yet enough of a professional to generate all this outstanding footage, and quite rightly Herzog declines to patronise or make fun of him.
Fascinating documentary about obsession, insanity and, well, bears, this is by turns moving, disturbing and laugh-out-loud funny.
German auteur Werner Herzog pieces together the remarkable footage Treadwell left behind into a superb portrait of a fractured obsessive living literally on the edge.
Like so much of Herzog's work, both narrative and documentary, this is an engrossing look at obsessive behavior gone terribly awry.
Treadwell, a failed TV actor, is presented as someone desperate to give and receive love. That he went to such extremes is tragic, but also, in Herzog's sympathetic eyes, deeply human.
As a character critique it is hardly a mauling, for Herzog is too sophisticated a thinker, too respectful towards his subject, and altogether too humane to tear Treadwell apart for a second time.
Uma das maiores obras-primas da carreira de um cineasta que vem conquistando, ao longo dos últimos 44 anos, um lugar mais do que merecido entre os ícones da Sétima Arte.
After having gorged on nonfiction films that tell us what to think, Werner Herzog’s Grizzly Man is an improbable palate cleanser, allowing us to not know what to think and encouraging us to admit as much.
Que a nadie le quede duda alguna, este es el show de Treadwell, y es la naturaleza humana -no la animal- la verdadera materia de análisis.
Makes us feel like kids at a Punch and Judy show wanting to shout out "Behind you!"
Not really a nature film (unless maybe human nature?). I just couldn't help but feel it was more opportunistic than inspired. I left feeling somewhat manipulated.
At turns fascinating and banal… a film that dances around vital questions about the human condition that it is barely able to articulate, let alone address.
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