✅ Wear headphones 🎧 for full blizzard immersion
❄️ This is not a Hollywood movie. This is a story inspired by real accounts of indigenous Yakut survival in the coldest inhabited place on Earth.
Deep in the Siberian taiga, where your breath freezes mid-exhale, where temperatures drop to a deadly -71°C, a 75-year-old Yakut woman was walking home through a raging blizzard when she heard a tiny, trembling cry buried under the snow.
It was a newborn spotted fawn, separated from its herd, minutes away from freezing to death.
And 200 meters behind it, a 600kg brown bear was closing in for its kill.
🦌 She did not run.
She did not hide.
She chose to save the life of a helpless animal, even if it meant risking her own.
Over the longest night of her life, she will outrun a charging bear, survive a fall down a frozen ravine, cross cracking river ice, and fight for every second of both their lives.
This story will change how you see strength. We are taught courage belongs to the young, to the strong, to the fast. This grandmother will prove you wrong.
👇 What is the bravest thing you have ever done for someone or something that could never repay you? Drop it in the comments.
👍 Like if this story moved you | 🔔 Subscribe for more true survival stories | 📤 Share this with someone who needs a reminder of what kindness looks like.
🎞️ Official Synopsis (For Film Festivals / Streaming Platform Submissions)
Professional, formal, perfect for short film / documentary submissions
Runtime: [Insert your runtime] | Genre: Survival Drama / True Story Documentary
Set in the unforgiving permafrost of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), at a bone-chilling temperature of -71°C, Fur Coat and The Fawn follows an unnamed 75-year-old indigenous Yakut elder who stumbles upon a stranded newborn fawn moments before it is to be killed by a roaming 600kg brown bear.
What begins as a simple act of kindness unfolds into a relentless, hours-long battle for survival against the elements, a relentless predator, and the limits of human endurance. With nothing but her reindeer fur coat, decades of traditional knowledge of the taiga, and an unbreakable will, the grandmother defies every expectation of what someone her age is capable of surviving.
This film is a love letter to the wisdom of indigenous communities, the unspoken bond between humans and nature, and the fact that true heroism wears no crown.
🖼️ Poster / Thumbnail Short Blurb
Punchy, memorable, perfect for graphic assets
🥶 -71°C Siberia
👵 75 Years Old
🐻 600kg Bear
🦌 One life to save.
She did not have to fight. She chose to.
📱 X / Instagram Feed / Facebook Caption
Shareable, emotional, perfect for viral social posts
👵 Today I want you to meet the greatest hero you have never heard of.
At 75 years old, in -71°C Siberian cold, this Yakut grandmother found a baby deer seconds before a 600kg brown bear was going to kill it.
She could have walked away. She could have saved herself.
She did not.
For hours she ran, she hid, she fought, she outsmarted one of the deadliest predators on the planet, all to save a creature that could never pay her back.
We live in a world that tells us we need to be fast, strong, young, to do great things.
This woman proves all of that is a lie.
Great things come from kindness. From courage. From choosing someone else over yourself, even when all the odds are stacked against you.
❤️ Drop a heart for this incredible woman.
#FurCoatAndTheFawn #SurvivalStory #IndigenousWisdom
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