When a young Inuit hunter needlessly kills a bear, he is magically changed into a bear himself as punishment with a talkative cub being his only guide to changing back.When a young Inuit hunter needlessly kills a bear, he is magically changed into a bear himself as punishment with a talkative cub being his only guide to changing back.When a young Inuit hunter needlessly kills a bear, he is magically changed into a bear himself as punishment with a talkative cub being his only guide to changing back.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 2 wins & 22 nominations total
Joaquin Phoenix
- Kenai
- (voice)
Jeremy Suarez
- Koda
- (voice)
Rick Moranis
- Rutt
- (voice)
Jason Raize
- Denahi
- (voice)
Dave Thomas
- Tuke
- (voice)
D.B. Sweeney
- Sitka
- (voice)
Joan Copeland
- Tanana
- (voice)
Michael Clarke Duncan
- Tug
- (voice)
Harold Gould
- Old Denahi
- (voice)
Paul Christie
- Ram #1
- (voice)
Danny Mastrogiorgio
- Ram #2
- (voice)
- (as Daniel Mastrogiorgio)
Estelle Harris
- Old Lady Bear
- (voice)
Greg Proops
- Male Lover Bear
- (voice)
Bumper Robinson
- Chipmunks
- (voice)
Patrick Pinney
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
- (as Pat Pinney)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe lines, "I don't care that you and Binky found the world's biggest pine cone ever" and "First of all, it's not Binky, it's Bucky, and it wasn't a pine cone, it was a pine nut" said by Kenai (Joaquin Phoenix) and Koda (Jeremy Suarez) was an accidental improvisation because Phoenix messed up his line and Suarez corrected it when they were recording.
- GoofsIn the opening scene, the DVD subtitles identify the narrator as Sitka, when it is actually Denahi.
- Crazy creditsAt the conclusion of the end credits, Koda appears to announce the standard declaration that no salmon were harmed in the making of the film. However, he is embarrased by a bear chasing a salmon behind him and signals for shooting to stop. Koda covers the lens with his paws and the picture goes black as he accidently breaks the camera while the fishing bear belches.
- Alternate versionsThe 2013 Blu-ray release plasters the closing variant of the 2000 Walt Disney Pictures logo with the closing 2011 variant of the 2006 Walt Disney Pictures logo, which just reads "Disney".
- ConnectionsEdited into Zenimation: Nature (2020)
- SoundtracksGreat Spirits
Written by Phil Collins
Produced and Arranged by Phil Collins and Mark Mancina
Performed by Tina Turner
Featured review
I don't know what the hell people (or critics for that matter) are looking for, but this movie was EXCELLENT. For my 3-year-old to sit through the whole thing is testimony enough to its interest. The Phil Collins soundtrack is the only thing that wasn't exciting - almost as if he was trying too hard - but I wouldn't criticize the whole movie for that. There just weren't any "memorable" songs that ran through my head afterwards. For someone that has to endure "kid" movies more than any other, this was by far one of the most enjoyable.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Tierra de osos
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $128,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $85,336,277
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $291,940
- Oct 26, 2003
- Gross worldwide
- $250,397,798
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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