Film Review

“Earthling” Pushes the Boundries of Documentary Genre


By YogeshSimpson, 6-19-05

Ducking out of the Teton Theatre and onto the rainy streets of Jackson, Wyoming this past Sunday I did feel fortunate to have stumbled upon the film “Earthling.� A friend and I had spent a wet night on Mt. Moran and made it back to town in time to see a long line in front of the Teton. We knew the Jackson Hole Film Festival was going on and figured the line must mean the movie was good. We got the last two tickets sold and many people were turned away. The film had just won both the audience choice award and best cinematography at the awards banquet the night before. Like the first screening, the Sunday show sold out and provoked a standing ovation from the crowd. I stood for the ovation too, but mostly because it was the polite thing to do.

The film’s website refers to it as a “feature length docu-movie.� As a journalist, the word documentary holds a somewhat sacred status to me, implying, in the simplest terms: unvarnished truth. I think it was the overpowering scent of varnish that made it hard for me to stand for the ovation. By laying claim to only half the word the producers perhaps only felt obligated to deliver half-truths. In the interest of full disclosure I feel obligated to say that I thoroughly enjoyed the film. Still, I’m chafed by the cavalier blending of truth and fiction and the latent suggestion that the viewer believe it all.

It’s a story about real people, real events and real wildlife, but somehow manages to feel completely contrived. The plot centers around Tristan Bayer, son of Wolfgang Bayer, who is apparently one of the more prolific wildlife filmmakers alive. After a surviving a heart attack Wolfgang decides to take his whole family (wife, daughter and son, all of which play themselves) on a two-year global tour of his favorite filming locations while he makes what will be his final film. Perhaps the most melodramatic moment of the film is when Tristan watches his dad’s heart seize up while the two are filming in Yellowstone. But Tristan (who co-directed the film with his dad) told us in the Q&A after the screening that his dad was actually at the public pool when it happened. He said he took a little poetic license.

The film actually took seven years to make and they made multiple trips to some of the locations in the film. Not to mention the various anonymous cameramen that film Tristan and Wolfgang while they’re filming. It’s a strangely circular concept, a film about the making of a film, but the making of the film was staged around the real footage of the original film. It’s enough to make your head spin.

As a wildlife film it is as visually stunning and intimate with its wild subjects as any I’ve seen. Yet the amazing footage of Polar bears battling on the tundra and orangutans playing in the treetops is dressed up with gratuitous scenes of the family grinning and hugging in a world where the light is always perfect and a helicopter is always waiting. The group is about as handsome a cast of characters as you could imagine and they glide effortlessly from one ideal location to another with only the vaguest hint of adversity or conflict. The only thread of narrative tension comes from Tristan’s metaphysical wrestling match with himself, which unfortunately serves as narration for the film. The bottomless blue of the ocean inspires some poetic imagery at the start, but his musings quickly devolve into platitudes with about as much depth as a kiddie pool.

Feature films request that you suspend disbelief, documentaries trust there is no disbelief to suspend, you can’t have it both ways. Throughout the film Tristan struggles to find his own voice as a filmmaker. As a family special on the Discovery channel “Earthling� is a slam dunk. It is an exotic and colorful beast, but if Tristan is going to lay claim to any part of the word documentary in describing it he should have his poetic license revoked.



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By Quentin B., 6-24-05
By Ken Courtney, 7-06-05

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