While searching for their missing father in the mountains of Alaska, two siblings come across a baby polar bear on the run from a pair of poachers.While searching for their missing father in the mountains of Alaska, two siblings come across a baby polar bear on the run from a pair of poachers.While searching for their missing father in the mountains of Alaska, two siblings come across a baby polar bear on the run from a pair of poachers.
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
Byron Chief-Moon
- Chip's Father
- (as Byron Chief Moon)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Hard to figure the negative comments about this film. It is geared to an elementary school audience who will find it very entertaining. But it is also good family viewing because the scenery is terrific and the polar bear cub is very cute. Since there was never a conspiracy to keep the demographic identity of the target audience a national secret, those complaining about its lack of sophistication were just too lazy to check it out before actually viewing it. The film delivers exactly what it promises so there is no real basis for that kind of criticism.
The editing is first class; especially on the canoe down the rapids sequence where the second unit stuff is perfectly cut into tight shots of the two stars. Thora Birch turns in another excellent performance and Vincent Kartheiser shows that even before "Angel" he modeled his acting on William Shatner (this is not a complement).
There are a number of plot holes but nothing that really matters. One interesting thing is the scene where the bear cub helps in the rescue effort by pulling the rope with his teeth. Seldom can you point to a "single" stupid detail that drastically dumbs down a film but that is the case here. Lose that one moronic shot and the film gains about 20 IQ points and could add a couple years to its target audience.
The editing is first class; especially on the canoe down the rapids sequence where the second unit stuff is perfectly cut into tight shots of the two stars. Thora Birch turns in another excellent performance and Vincent Kartheiser shows that even before "Angel" he modeled his acting on William Shatner (this is not a complement).
There are a number of plot holes but nothing that really matters. One interesting thing is the scene where the bear cub helps in the rescue effort by pulling the rope with his teeth. Seldom can you point to a "single" stupid detail that drastically dumbs down a film but that is the case here. Lose that one moronic shot and the film gains about 20 IQ points and could add a couple years to its target audience.
- aimless-46
- Jan 25, 2005
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThora Birch and Vincent Kartheiser did their own stunts, after a month of intense training sessions with the movie's sports consultants.
- GoofsWhen Sean is going down a rock wall to rescue his father from the plane, you can see the shadow of the microphone on a rock.
- Alternate versionsThe Columbia Pictures logo and its closing line art logo are both plastered in the 2002-prints from Warner Bros. who owns most of Castle Rock's pre-2010 library including Alaska. And despite featuring the 2001 Warner Bros. Pictures logo at the start and end, the DVD's closing logo does not have the "Distributed by" line above the WB shield while the digital version retains it.
- How long is Alaska?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Alaska, terra d'aventures
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $23,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,829,959
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,914,992
- Aug 18, 1996
- Gross worldwide
- $11,829,959
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