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Brother Bear (85 min)
Synopsis: The impulsive teen Kenai is the youngest of three Inuit brothers living in the Pacific Northwest after the last Ice Age. At his totem ceremony – the first step on his path to becoming a man – the shaman Tanana reveals that Kenai’s totem is a bear, representing love. Later that day, through Kenai’s carelessness, Kenai and his brother Denahi find themselves cornered by a bear. To save them, their oldest brother, Sitka, sacrifices himself and Kenai kills the bear as revenge for Sitka’s death. As punishment, Sitka’s spirit changes Kenai into a bear. Now Kenai must go to where the colorful Northern Lights touch the mountain to convince Sitka’s spirit to turn him back into a man. On his journey, Kenai teams up with a boisterous cub, Koda, who teaches him to “Look Through My Eyes,” and meets a comical pair of moose, Tuke and Rutt. Kenai must learn from his new friends and tap into the powers of his totem to become a man – by becoming a bear.
Cast: Joaquin Phoenix (Kenai), Jeremy Suarez (Koda), Jason Raize (Denahi), Rick Moranis (Rutt), Dave Thomas (Tuke), D.B. Sweeney (Sitka), Michael Clarke Duncan (Tug), Joan Copeland (Tanana), Estelle Harris (Old Lady Bear), Bumper Robinson (Chipmunks).
Songs: “Great Spirits,” “Transformation,” “On My Way,” “Welcome,” “No Way Out,” “Look Through My Eyes,”
Directed by Aaron Blaise and Robert Walker.
Released on November 1, 2003, after an October 24 limited release in New York and Los Angeles.
US Home Media Releases: March 30, 2004 (VHS/DVD); March 12, 2013 (BR);
Trivia:
• Frames: 122,400
• Includes six songs by Phil Collins.
• “The Transformation Song,” included lyrics written by Collins in English, which were then translated into Inuit. The translated lyrics were then sung by the Bulgarian Women’s Choir and the remaining musical elements were created on the computer.
• Created at the Disney Feature Animation Studio in Florida.
• The last two thirds of the film, after Kenai is changed into a bear, are filmed in Cinemascope. The aspect ratio changes from 1:1.85 to 1:2.35
• The working title was Bears.
• It received an Academy Award nomination as Best Animated Feature.
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