Orca whales are not your friends. Remember how Free Willy was basically about the importance of releasing wild animals back into the wild? The documentary Blackfish, directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, puts a nonfiction spin on that narrative—in a terrifying, shocking way that should have us all casting a wary eye at SeaWorld and other similar parks. Whales have died and people have died. When are we going to stop this?
It will be extremely difficult for viewers to come out of this film without feeling for both sides—for the young, impressionable, whale-obsessed trainers who joined SeaWorld thinking they would form legitimate bonds and friendships with these animals, and for the animals themselves that were stolen from their families and sold to such parks for a life of entrapment. Shaky footage from shows where whales dragged their trainers underneath the water and held them there, or purposefully fell on trainers, crushing their bodies, are terrifying and harrowing, but the man who tells of participating in capturing whales for sale has been through some shit, too. It’s all over his face, all over his voice, all over everything. You’re not going to forget his pain easily.
In fact, it doesn’t seem like anyone involved in SeaWorld or similar parks’ practices has walked away unscathed—ex-SeaWorld trainer after trainer tells Cowperthwaite, through tears, about their regrets; family members of dead trainers look shell-shocked; scientists who study whales in the wild are disgusted with captivity in general. And amid all this is Tilikum, who Cowperthwaite discovers was horrendously bullied by older female whales at another park, who has probably gone somewhat insane from captivity, who has basically been milked for his sperm by SeaWorld (54 percent of their whales are descendants of his), whose dorsal fin has collapsed because of lack of use. The people he’s killed are never coming back, but Tilikum isn’t ever really coming back either, you know? No one wins in Blackfish but that’s absolutely the point—you won’t forget Cowperthwaite’s documentary, and you shouldn’t.
RATING: 4.5 out of 5 Guttenbergs.
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