Weak movie


It's by no means the worst feature film that Disney has ever done, as it's not offensively political, but it is indeed quite unremarkable.

The pity of it is that it doesn't begin that badly. The relationship of the brothers as humans is a mildly interesting one, as is the village community.

The idea of a brother who wishes to be a great warrior and is disappointed to be given nothing better than a love totem is quite understandable.

The visuals of the Northern Lights are truly spectacular, evincing real Disney greatness. In general, the depictions of the Northern climate are impressive.

And the initial battles with the bear are dramatic and exciting. The idea that the brother could kill a bear with nothing but a spear is quite thrilling -- a truly heroic act at a time when humans would have been desperate for food and vulnerable to bear predations.

However, the film veers sharply towards the disappointing when the brother is transformed into the bear. The animation seems to become less realistic, the humor is quite poor throughout, and the bear cub isn't particularly appealing. Also, the episodic incidents that happen after this moment lack tension. It becomes just another road-trip movie.

The songs are unmemorable, some even trivial.

And the finale is pathetic. First a transformation into a human, then back to a bear? It loses all emotional force. "Make up your mind."

And the idea of man/bear cohabitation is ridiculous. Indeed, while the theme that man should live in harmony with nature is a reasonable one, it's rendered absurd when animals don't behave like wild animals anymore.

Although this is yet another entry into Disney's seemingly endless string of politically correct movies that began with Pocahontas and continued through to at least this film (with Princess and the Frog as a late addition), it at least isn't as actively offensive as films such as Hunchback and Mulan and Tarzan. But nevertheless, it suffers from story weaknesses and not particularly engaging characters.

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People who complain about political correctness are just upset they can't be openly bigoted any more.

Can't stop the signal.

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People who complain about political correctness are just upset they can't be openly bigoted any more.

No. People who complain about political correctness can't stand cultural-Leftist propaganda in movies -- or often propaganda in general.

If we lived in a world where every movie was pushing Christian dogma, Christian dogma would be politically correct, and I'd be against that.

But we don't. We live in a world where entertainment is 99% culturally Leftist, and when that political agenda is blatant, it destroys a film's entertainment value.

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No, it's the one I stated. They just want to be openly bigoted. Especially since leftism just means being more considerate of others and their cultures and not using outdated terms to describe people.

After all, just what exactly is "politically correct" about Pocahontas, Brother Bear, and the Princess and the Frog. Other than that they don't feature white protagonists as much as other Disney movies?

Let's be bad guys.

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"Especially since leftism just means being more considerate of others and their cultures and not using outdated terms to describe people. "

This is the dumbest thing I've heard anyone say. It's 2 years later.....You don't still stand by this stupidity do you??

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It's a freaking Disney movie, mate....You actually expect a disney movie to be politically incorrect??

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You're being a moron as always.

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"Although this is yet another entry into Disney's seemingly endless string of politically correct movies that began with Pocahontas and continued through to at least this film (with Princess and the Frog as a late addition), it at least isn't as actively offensive as films such as Hunchback and Mulan and Tarzan."

How the hell were Hunchback, Mulan and Tarzan politically correct???

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