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Why Dogs Smile and Chimpanzees Cry Streaming

Why Dogs Smile and Chimpanzees Cry Streaming. Why Dogs Smile and Chimpanzees Cry Streaming.

Movie Title: Why Dogs Smile and Chimpanzees Cry
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This is a lively, and often quite gripping documentary showing the emotional kinship between man and his fellow mammals. The film footage is mighty, starting with the basic emotions that pertain to survival, “dread, aggression, and the hasten to procreate”, and then moves on to the more subtle feelings of joy, compassion, anguish, loyalty, and even depression.

The caring of one another in animal societies is astounding, and shows the bonds of friendship between species of primates, meerkats, wolves, and many more.

The part on maternal like is fantastic, with one exceptional segment by wildlife photographer Martyn Colbeck who follows a herd of elephants, and captures the broad patience and devotion exhibited towards a recently born calf as he struggles to meander. There are many instances of fabulous sacrifice, including the epic of a dog who saves a young boy.

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It shows how rescue dogs can display signs of depression, and rats who laugh when they are glad. I worship the chimp who is looking at Gourmet Magazine, and points to pictures of pastries and signs “sweet”.

As Dr. Roger Fouts of the Chimpanzee Human Communication Institute says, the inequity between us and other animals is “one of degree, and not of kind”.

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Produced, written and directed by Carol Fleisher, and calmly and carefully narrated by Sigourney Weaver, viewing this documentary is time well spent; it is informative as well as arresting, but parents of young children should realize that though there is plenty of fun and frolic, it is far from being a cute animal film, and there are scenes of violence and tragedy. Total running time is 95 minutes.

This film is a landmark in blending science and advocacy. It seeks to stammer that animals lead complex and sophisticated emotional lives, not unlike our hold. But it manages to waddle the blooming line between subjectivity and objectivity. It avoids going too far into the subjective. It doesn’t try to emotionally blackmail the viewer with mere cute/stagey displays of animal interaction. Instead it relies heavily on scientific observation in both natural and controlled environments. But by the sheer genious of editing and writing, one cannot serve but be drawn into the lives of these trustworthy creatures unprejudiced as one would a genuine drama. The movie wisely lets the animals’ behavior “do the talking”, and doesn’t try to push the viewers’ judgement one procedure or the other. It left me rethinking everything I had assumed about animals, emotions, and the nature of our (and by ‘our’ I mean all of God’s creatures) existence.
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