Director: Gabriela
Cowperthwaite
Genre: Documentary
Runtime: 83
minutes
Year:
2013
Starring: John Hargrove,
Samantha Berg, Mark Simmons, Dean Gomersall, Carol Ray, John Jett, Jeffrey Ventre
Genre: Documentary
Description: A documentary following the controversial captivity of killer whales, and its dangers for both humans and whales.
As if the misery surrounding the capture wasn’t bad enough, the scope of “Blackfish” is even greater. This is also where it takes a different path than “The Cove”. There have been at least seventy cases in recent decades of incidents in which trainers in dolphinariums were killed, suffered very serious injuries or narrowly escaped them. The marine parks, of which the American Sea World is by the largest and best known, were happy to seep the incidents under the rug. In their view, the orca is a harmless and peaceful animals and it is actually always the trainer’s fault that accidents occurred. However, many former trainers and scientist agree that it is the captivity of the animals and the complete desperation that drives them to this behavior. The orca male Tilikum is a notable case in point. He cause a fatal accident in Canada in the 1990s. despite this, Sea World in Florida bought Tilikum where he caused trainer Dawn Brancheau to die a gruesome death in 2010.
It is a one-sided story. Documentary filmmaker Gabriela Cowperthwaite can do little about it because Sea World did not want to cooperate. The only backlash given comes from a former trainer. On the other hand, she pushes her message hard. Despite the lack of an adversarial approach, the filmmaker succeeds in sketching a fascinating history of Tilikum and the many wrong decisions that the money-grubbing man has made. The image of trainers at the mercy of the orcas are both shocking and fascinating. There is some effect, because “Blackfish” is presented almost as a thriller. Downright shocking is the way Sea World tries to blame the accidents on the trainers. Touching and heartbreaking are the stories about mother orcas crying when their calves are taken from them.
The main conclusion of this impressive documentary is that sensitive animals like orcas simply belong in the wild
Rating: 5/ 5
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