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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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112789
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11278900.062
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1990-09-19
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LETTERS, Page 6Bearing It
In describing the movie The Bear, based on James Oliver
Curwood's book The Grizzly King, you refer to a cub's attempts to
attach itself to a full-grown male bear as a protector-mentor
(CINEMA, Oct. 30). This would be unusual because it is not uncommon
for male grizzly bears to kill and even eat unprotected cubs. This
behavior may seem savage or even bizarre, but to the great bear it
is the natural order of things. A more accurate film would show the
orphaned cub attempting (probably unsuccessfully) to elude the
deadly, mature, solitary male. Granted, cinema often diverges from
reality, but to offer the insipid scenario of a mature male
protector bear violates the integrity of both humans and grizzlies.
This movie portrays the wilderness with a kind of Disney Bambi
mentality. A more realistic, less idealistic understanding of our
natural world is critical to the better management of our dwindling
resources.
Dave Stricklan, Wildlife Biologist
USDA Forest Service
Halsey, Neb.
You report that British Columbia was considered "no longer wild
and woolly enough" as a setting in which to film The Bear. Whom are
you kidding? How many wild grizzly bears are roaming around the
movie's location site of the Bavarian Alps? There are thousands of
grizzlies in B.C.
Keith Millar
Scottsdale, Ariz.