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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOpinion: SeaWorld vs. the Whale That Killed Its Trainer, National Geographic
The film Blackfish probes the case of an orca that killed its trainer. Blame is assigned to SeaWorldrightly so, in my view.
Kenneth Brower for National Geographic
Published August 3, 2013
The documentary Blackfish opened around the country on July 26, with more splash than usual for a small-budget production, thanks to a preemptive attack on the film by SeaWorld, the marine-park franchise, and the free publicity of the tempest that followed.
Blackfish tells the story of Tilikum, the homicidal killer whale, and his most recent victim, Dawn Brancheau, the SeaWorld trainer he crushed, dismembered, and partially swallowed in 2010. The film is an indictment of SeaWorld, its safety practices, its animal husbandry, its mendacity, and its whole reason for being.
In the week before advance screenings in Los Angeles and New York, SeaWorld sent out a "Dear Film Critic" letter that castigated the documentary as "shamefully dishonest, deliberately misleading, and scientifically inaccurate." Journalists and bloggers around the world, never averse to controversy, pricked up their ears. If the film's producers ever worried about insufficient funds for advertising, they can lay that fear to rest.
In a theater a month ago, toward the end of a long series of trailers for movies my girlfriend and I resolved not to see, the Blackfish trailer began. I sat up in my seat. Within the first few frames, well before the identity of this particular "blackfish" came up on the screen, I knew which orca he would be. Tilikum is a whale whose career I have followed for 13 years. Like many familiar with his history, I had not been surprised by Dawn Brancheau's death. We all had wondered when Tilikum would kill again.
Good Twin, Evil Twin
Blackfish and its themes set me to thinking again about Orcinus orca, the killer whale, the sea's supreme predator, and our strange, ambivalent view of this animal and the narratives we impose on it.
Here's one: Tilikum had a sort of twin, Keiko, the killer whale who played "Willy" in the movies. Both were captured as two-year-old calves off Iceland, Keiko in 1979 and Tilikum in 1983; both were motherless males abused by other whales in Canadian marine parks; both were moved to facilities farther south; both, on maturing, suffered the collapse of the dorsal fin, the floppy trademark of all captive bull orcas.
One twin grew up to be the most famous whale in history, if you rule out Moby Dick and the whale that swallowed Jonah. This twin gave daily audiences to thousands of human pilgrims, played himself in his own documentary films, and was a regular on the television news. He was beloved by children all over the world, who sent him great stacks of misspelled mash notes, get-well cards, valentines, confidential personal updates, and whimsical, anatomically incorrect killer whale illustrations in crayon and poster paint.
full article
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/08/130803-blackfish-orca-killer-whale-keiko-tilikum-sea-world/
Interview on National Geographic radio, scroll down to hour 2
http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2013/08/27/august-25-2013-running-ultramarathons-at-18000-feet-hitting-the-beach-with-wolves-and-more/
Watch: Dozens of orca whales swim past Galiano Island, near British Columbia
NuclearDem
(16,184 posts)Putting animals in cages and forcing them to perform for our amusement is sickening.
get the red out
(13,462 posts)It makes me sick. Whales are so intelligent, to force them to live in captivity is an outrage. We need to grow up and realize that this is wrong.
AtomicKitten
(46,585 posts)I've been whale watching in Puget Sound a few times but never saw anything close to the magnitude of this spectacular pod.
These creatures don't belong in a cement fish bowl.
Beringia
(4,316 posts)that there may be a food shortage, because normally different pods do not travel together.
Beringia
(4,316 posts)Interview with director of Blackfish and a former trainer