by pinback » Fri Dec 03, 2010 10:27 am
Hey. Hey you Japanese people. Stop killing all those dolphins, I guess.
Provided you are totally down with the premise, and believe everything the "main character" (Ric O'Barry, former trainer for the TV show Flipper and now uber-activist against dolphin captivity) says, it's a good documentary, exposing this one little hidden inlet where a bunch of Jap fisherman just go all apeshit on a bunch of dolphins every day until the water runs bright red and the sea is filled with the cries of dying dolphins.
If you do NOT necessarily buy Ric O'Barry (and I will admit, his confession that Flipper "committed suicide in his arms" knocks his credibility level down and his kook factor through the roof), aren't willing to accept statistics without some context, or hate dolphins, you may not be quite as thrilled with it.
I fall somewhere in between, but my main question is, why do dolphins get all this special attention? It's the old joke about "dolphin-safe tuna". Not such a good deal for the tuna, eh?
The movie tries to make the point that they're special because they're smart and have an affinity to humans and they're cute and all that. But if we're okay killing anything that ain't smart and don't like humans, then I guess it's time to DROP THE BOMB ON CALTROPS LOLOLOLOL
Three (***) Stars
Hey. Hey you Japanese people. Stop killing all those dolphins, I guess.
Provided you are totally down with the premise, and believe everything the "main character" (Ric O'Barry, former trainer for the TV show Flipper and now uber-activist against dolphin captivity) says, it's a good documentary, exposing this one little hidden inlet where a bunch of Jap fisherman just go all apeshit on a bunch of dolphins every day until the water runs bright red and the sea is filled with the cries of dying dolphins.
If you do NOT necessarily buy Ric O'Barry (and I will admit, his confession that Flipper "committed suicide in his arms" knocks his credibility level down and his kook factor through the roof), aren't willing to accept statistics without some context, or hate dolphins, you may not be quite as thrilled with it.
I fall somewhere in between, but my main question is, why do dolphins get all this special attention? It's the old joke about "dolphin-safe tuna". Not such a good deal for the tuna, eh?
The movie tries to make the point that they're special because they're smart and have an affinity to humans and they're cute and all that. But if we're okay killing anything that ain't smart and don't like humans, then I guess it's time to DROP THE BOMB ON CALTROPS LOLOLOLOL
Three (***) Stars