Brother Bear
Brother Bear is a 2003 traditionally-animated musical fantasy comedy-drama movie produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures on November 21, 2003. It is about a human named Kenai who turns into a bear and discovers brotherhood. The 43rd animated feature in the Disney animated features canon, it was originally titled Bears, and was the third and final Disney animated movie produced mainly by the Feature Animation studio at Disney-MGM Studios in Orlando, Florida, that studio was shut down in March 2004, not long after the release of this movie in favor of computer animated features.[2] The movie received an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature, but lost to Finding Nemo. A sequel, Brother Bear 2, was released on August 29, 2006.
Brother Bear | |
---|---|
Directed by | Aaron Blaise Robert Walker |
Produced by | Chuck Williams |
Written by | Tab Murphy Lorne Cameron David Hoselton Steve Bencich Ron J. Friedman |
Starring | Joaquin Phoenix Jeremy Suarez Rick Moranis Dave Thomas Jason Raize D.B. Sweeney |
Narrated by | Harold Gould |
Music by | Phil Collins Mark Mancina |
Edited by | Tim Mertens |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Buena Vista Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $46 million[1] |
Box office | $250.4 million[1] |
Story
In prehistoric Alaska, the local Native Alaskans believe in the Great Spirits, who create life and are said to appear in the form of an aurora. Three brothers, Kenai, the youngest, Denahi, the middle, and Sitka, the elder, return to the tribe to receive totems, necklaces that take the shape of animals, with each animal being representative of something the brothers must achieve to prove themselves as men. Unlike Sitka, who receives the eagle of guidance, and Denahi, the wolf of wisdom, Kenai receives the bear of love, to which he objects, believing them to be thieves; he makes his point a fact when a grizzly bear steals their basket of fish. Kenai and his brothers pursue the bear; when the fight culminates on top of a glacier, Sitka sacrifices himself to save his brothers, by dislodging the glacier, but the bear survives. Following Sitka's funeral, Kenai takes it upon himself to slay the bear, blaming it for his brother's death. After fighting and slaying the animal, Sitka's spirit appears in the form of a bald eagle, and the Spirits transform Kenai into a bear. Denahi arrives and, thinking that the bear also killed Kenai, vows to avenge his brother by killing it.
Kenai falls down some rapids and is healed by Tanana, the tribal shaman; while she does not speak the bears' language, but advises him to travel to the mountain where Sitka's spirit will turn him back into a human, but only if he atones for his crime; vanishing without explanation. Kenai discovers he can now communicate with animals, meeting two moose called Rutt and Tuke. He ends up getting caught in a hunter's trap, but is freed by Koda, a sassy bear cub. The two strike a deal; in exchange for leading Koda to an annual salmon run, he will take Kenai to the mountain. The two form a brother-like relationship, and Koda reveals his mother is missing. The two are pursued by Denahi, who is out to avenge Kenai; unbeknownst to him, his brother is the bear he is hunting. Upon reaching the salmon run, where several bears congregate, including the leader Tug. Kenai accepts his new surroundings and is comfortable living amongst the bears. During a discussion, Koda tells a story about his mother getting involved in a fight with human hunters; this reminds Kenai of his brothers' fight with the bear, and he realizes, to his horror, that he killed Koda's mother.
Horrified by his actions, Kenai runs away in guilt, but Koda follows him. Upset, he confesses to Koda that he killed his mother, and the bear cub runs off in grief; an apologetic Kenai then travels to the mountain on his own. Meanwhile. Rutt and Tuke have a fight, but reconcile with each other in front of Koda, prompting him to forgive Kenai. On the mountain, Kenai is attacked by Denahi, but Koda steals his spear. Out of love for the bear cub, Kenai sacrifices himself, and Sitka's spirit transforms him back into a human, much to the surprise of Koda and Denahi. Upon realizing that the cub needs him due to his own mistakes, Kenai asks to be transformed back into a bear, with Denahi's support. Sitka complies, and transforms his brother back to his bear form, and Koda is briefly reunited with his mother's spirit, before she and Sitka depart to the spirit realm. In the end, Kenai lives with the other bears, and gains his title as a man through living as a bear.
Reception
The reaction from movie reviewers was mixed to negative with many panning the movie as copying older Disney movies like The Lion King and the 20th Century Fox movie Ice Age (although Brother Bear began production before Ice Age did), while others defended the movie as a different and reasonable variation of the theme. The popular American movie critics Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper have given positive reviews of the movie. However, Brother Bear holds a rating of 38% in Rotten Tomatoes, which says that "Brother Bear is gentle and pleasant if unremarkable Disney fare, with so-so animation and generic plotting".[3]
Voice cast
- Joaquin Phoenix as Kenai, the youngest of three brothers who gets turned into a bear, to teach him to see through their eyes
- Jeremy Suarez as Koda, a wisecracking grizzly bear cub, who helps Kenai on his journey to where the Lights Touch the Earth
- Jason Raize as Denahi, the middle brother
- Rick Moranis as Rutt, a comic Canadian moose
- Dave Thomas as Tuke, another comic Canadian moose
- D.B. Sweeney as Sitka, the oldest brother
- Joan Copeland as Tanana, the shaman-woman of Kenai's tribe
- Michael Clarke Duncan as Tug, a wise old cave bear
- Harold Gould as Old Kenai
- Paul Christie and Daniel Mastrogiorgio as two rams
- Estelle Harris as Mabel, old lady bear
- Greg Proops as a male lover bear
- Pauley Perrette as a female lover bear
- Darko Cesar as foreign bear
- Bumper Robinson as two chipmunks
- Angayuqaq Oscar Kawagley, Ph.D as the Inuit Narrator
- Frank Welker as Animals' vocal effects (uncredited)
- Hope Levy as a valley girl bear
Additional voices were provided by Caitlin Rose Anderson, Maxi Anderson, Bob Bergen, Jeffery L. Bergman, Rodger Bumpass, Carmen Carter, Cathy Cavadini, Randel Crenshaw, Cam Clarke, Jennifer Darling, Debi Derryberry, Cedric the Entertainer, Bill Farmer, Trey Finney, Dave Foley, Pat Fraley, Jess Harnell, B. Wyatt Johnson, Ben Johnson, Bethany Johnson, Luke Johnson, Amy Keys, Phil LaMarr, Hope Levy, Rick Logan, Sherry Lynn, Danny Mann, Arnold McCuller, Terence McGovern, Mickie McGowan, Tim Mertens, Laraine Newman, Rob Paulsen, Pat Pinney, Brian Posehn, Josef Powell, Phil Proctor, Pam Seagall, Roger C. Smith, Susan Stevens-Logan, Tara Strong, Cree Summer, Steve Susskind, Maddie Taylor, Alan Tudyk, Lamont Van Hook, Julia Waters, Oren Waters, Willie Wheaton, Fred White, Joe Whyte, Maxine W. Waters, Ariel Winter, Terry Wood, James Woods and Terry Young.
Crew
Crew Position | |
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Directed by | Aaron Blaise Robert Walker |
Produced by | Chuck Williams |
Written by | Tab Murphy Lorne Cameron David Hoselton Steve Bencich Ron J. Friedman |
Songs by | Phil Collins |
Original Score by | Mark Mancina Phil Collins |
Associate Producer | Igor Khait |
Art Director | Robh Ruppel |
Film Editor | Tim Mertens |
Artistic Supervisors | Steve Anderson (Story supervisor) Jeff Dickson (Layout supervisor) Barry R. Kooser (Background supervisor) Phillip S. Boyd & Chrisine Lawrence-Finney (Clean-up supervisor) Garrett Wren (Effects supervisor) |
Supervising Animators | Byron Howard (Kenai-Bear) Alex Kuperschmidt (Koda) Ruben A. Aquino (Denahi) James Young Jackson (Kenai-Human) Tony Stanley (Rutt) Broose Johnson (Tuke) Anthony Wayne Michaels (Sitka) Tom Gately (Tanana) Rune Brandt Bennicke (Tug & Koda's Mom) |
Background Stylist Character Design Artistic Coordinator Production Manager |
Xiangyuan Jie Rune Brandt Bennicke Kirk Bodyfelt Bruce Anderson |
Songs
Song | Performed by | Available on the soundtrack disc? | Heard in the film? |
Great Spirits | Tina Turner | Yes | Yes |
Transformation | Phil Collins | Yes | No |
Transformation | Bulgarian Women's Choir | Yes | Yes |
On My Way | Phil Collins | Yes | Yes (except Koda sings the first few lyrics and the last lyric) |
On My Way (this version contains Koda singing the first few lyrics and the last lyric) | Jeremy Suarez Phil Collins |
No | Yes |
Welcome | Phil Collins | Yes | No |
Welcome | Phil Collins The Blind Boys of Alabama |
Yes | Yes |
No Way Out (theme from Brother Bear) | Phil Collins | Yes | Yes |
Look Through My Eyes | Phil Collins | Yes | Yes (also on bonus material) |
Score by Mark Mancina/Phil Collins
Release Dates
Country | Premiere | VHS release date | DVD release date | Blu-ray release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
United States | November 1, 2003 | March 30, 2004 | March 30, 2004 | March 12, 2013 October 12, 2021 |
United Kingdom | December 5, 2003 | May 10, 2004 | May 10, 2004 | September 29, 2014 |
Australia | December 26, 2003 | June 30, 2004 | June 30, 2004 | September 21, 2016 |
United Arab Emirates | April 16, 2004 | September 10, 2004 | September 10, 2004 | November 15, 2013 August 23, 2024 |
Deleted songs
- "The Fishing Song" - This was intended for the salmon run sequence, but was replaced by "Welcome".
- "This Can't Be My Destiny" This was song by Phil Collins. But unfortunately it never made it to the movie. The song was however mention in the special feature by Phil Collins. This song was never released.
Sequel
Brother Bear 2 was released August 29, 2006.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Brother Bear". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 2016-01-13. Retrieved 2015-08-02.
- ↑ https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0328880/news Brother Bear (2003) - News
- ↑ http://www.animated-news.com/2003/brother-bear-two-thumbs-up/ Animated News » Brother Bear Two Thumbs Up!
Other websites
- Official site
- Brother Bear on IMDb
- Brother Bear at the Big Cartoon DataBase (Dead link)
- Brother Bear at AllRovi