I am a great movie buff. My tastes include action, comedy, thrillers and
science-fiction. Terminator 3, Phone Booth, Daredevil, you name it, I’ve seen
them all.
For a time when I was younger though, I used to be crazy about
movies on animals, snakes especially. As I grew older however, I lost all
interest in such films. The reason being they are all badly made and misleading
too. Most animals I have found, in my reading and experience, are peaceful
creatures, attacking only in self-defence. This fact however, doesn’t sell well
in the movie industry. Animals have to be shown to be ferocious and blood
thirsty, only then will people want to watch them. Consequently for a movie to
be a hit, film directors end up blowing the natural behavior of animals always
way out of proportions.
Take Steven Spielberg’s movie Jaws for instance. This
old movie is about a Great White shark, which ruthlessly chases and hunts people
swimming in the sea. Watching this movie made me so scared of sharks, that till
today I have a phobia of swimming alone in the sea.
Most sharks, you should
know, are harmless. Even the Great White sharks and the Tiger sharks, rarely
attack humans, the reason because humans are not their natural food. Stomach
contents of dead or killed Great Whites, have shown along with food, bicycle
tires, cans and metal objects, implying that they are scavengers. In fact most
experts agree that sharks have attacked humans only on occasions when they have
confused humans for some animal dead, or in distress.
I distinctly remember
reading an article some time ago which stated that the probability of being
attacked by a shark is even less than that of being hit by lightning! Viruses,
bacteria and other diseases kill millions of people every year. One estimate
states that mosquitoes have wiped out half the world’s population since the
Stone Age. Yet thanks to movies like Jaws and Deep Blue Sea innocent sharks get
the bad name.
Coming back to the sea, The Beast is another movie that I
would have banned had I been on the Censor Board. The film is about a giant
squid which attacks boats and kills people. This movie gave me the jitters.
After that even rubbing of seaweed against my foot while I was swimming in the
sea used to make me imagine I was being stalked by a sea monster.
Giant
squids live deep in the ocean. Their bodies are so long, that along with their
tendrils they could measure 50-60 meters in length. Again, I should state that
they are never known to attack humans. As a matter of fact hardly anyone has
even seen one. The only ones probably ever encountered were dead ones washed up
on the shore.
The most famous movie on snakes was probably Anaconda. Though
this film had very good computer graphics, everything portrayed about the snake
was very wrong and untrue. Anacondas don’t look like that, they don’t grow that
big, they don’t chase their prey or hunt for fun, and most important of all,
they don’t eat humans. Though I have seen pictures of this snake getting the
better of a small crocodile, I can’t think of a single incident recorded where
an anaconda has attacked man or child.
My father recently was watching a
movie called Out of Towners, about a township coming up on a nest of
rattle-snakes. He found it creating so many negative feelings in him about
snakes that he soon turned it off.
Bollywood is also to blame. Though
Bollywood usually turns snakes into heroes, it encourages people to believe that
snakes can perform outrageous feats such as opening door handles by coiling
around them, drinking milk when offered to them, protecting vulnerable heroines
and chasing villains, and most famous of all – approaching beens when they are
played by the actors. The myth about beens is so firmly entrenched in people
that I remember my neighbors actually turning down their T.V volumes during
these been playing scenes, fearful that the sound would bring snakes into the
house!
The sucker that I am for animal films I couldn’t resist watching a
film on Komodo dragons and another called Ghost in the Darkness, a story about
two lions who terrorized an entire village.
Thankfully, though, I have
finally put a full stop to watching such films, and so I have decided not to
watch two movies - Bats and Piranha - my cousins have told me that each one is
worse than the other.
After watching so many animal movies, I some times
wonder if movies about living animals today are so erroneous, how misleading
movies made about extinct animals like Jurassic Park must be. Both Jurassic Park
and The Lost World present dinosaurs as some of the most feared animals to have
ever walked on this earth, yet for all you know dinosaurs might have been as
friendly as your neighbour’s cute little puppies.
Rahul