Blue Water, Black-and-White
Death
by Thomas Delapa
Oceans away from
the feel-good New Zealand fable Whale Rider, Blackfish swims in the same roiling documentary school as The
Cove, the Oscar-winning 2009 exposé about the grisly annual slaughter of dolphins
at a seaside Japanese village.
But Blackfish
strikes closer much to home and lands like a punch to the gut. Director
Gabriela Cowperthwaite methodically reels us into her fact-heavy investigation
that fatefully begins with the much-publicized death of a SeaWorld Orlando orca
trainer in early 2010. “Death” is an innocuous term for what happened to Dawn
Brancheau, who was caught and shredded by Tilikum, a six-ton, twenty-foot
killer whale.
Cowperthwaite—a TV
sports documentarian—is never sensational in recounting the gruesome details of
this and other attacks by Tilikum since he was captured off Iceland in the
1980s. The darkness lurking at the heart of Blackfish is that the attacks
were suppressed by SeaWorld officials, if not altogether deep-sixed, at least
according to the gallery of former SeaWorld trainers interviewed for this scathing
tract. The sheer number and sincerity of these testimonials will likely
convince audiences that this is no mere mammal-hugging fish tale. And those
still not hooked need only note the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health
Administration’s 2012 ruling and fine against SeaWorld in the wake of
Brancheau’s horrid death.
Cowperthwaite
constructs her tract as equal parts horror story, mystery and marine-biology
lesson. Few recent documentaries have so deftly utilized video and film
footage to make such a devastating, if didactic, case. In our
sea-to-shining-sea world of security and surveillance cameras, seeing is believing,
and we’re afforded compelling replays of the events in chilling detail. It’s
almost as if Cowperthwaite were on the trail of a cold-case murderer, as the
life of “Tilly” is traced from his capture to his stay at a low-rent Canadian
sea park and finally on to Florida, where his aggressive past was ignored and
he became the “big splash” at Shamu Stadium.
SeaWorld
visitors on any coast know that these majestic creatures (called blackfish by
Native Americans) are the stars of the show, performing with their trainers in
a revue of risky tricks and stunts in big-top outdoor pools. To the casual
observer, the whales are happy, docile, gentle giants—Flipper’s super-sized
cousins. But the ex-trainers and experts testify to a dark side,
speaking candidly about the volatile nature of these massive, intelligent predators that can turn on their handlers in a heartbeat. From a
natural habitat of the wide blue sea, living in tight matriarchal family
“pods,” these captured orcas are torn from their kin, trained (mostly by
amateurs) through strict behaviorist discipline and housed essentially in
underwater cages—the net long-term result often being neurotic and aggressive
behavior.
Of all the
chilling footage featured by the filmmakers, perhaps none plunges deeper into
the shadowy sea-park abyss than the sight of trainer Ken Peters as he’s
helplessly dragged underwater like a bathtub toy by an angry orca. Adams
survived to tell about it, but Brancheau and several other mangled victims
weren’t nearly as lucky.
Audiences may
well agree that the tagline hook for Blackfish could be lifted from a poster
carried by a recent SeaWorld animal-rights demonstrator: "Free Tilly."
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Blackfish, a
Magnolia Pictures release, will be available on DVD Nov. 12, 2013.
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