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While not the best of Disneynature’s offerings, Chimpanzee is informative, entertaining, and visually striking, and nothing if not a labor of love.
At its best when it shows the chimps engaging in their daily rituals, including grooming, foraging for food, and using rocks, logs, and twigs as primitive tools. The latter allows for a few scenes of levity. It takes the right tools and years of practice to be able to crack a nut open, and it’s obvious that some chimps aren’t as quick to learn as others. One chimp has the darnedest time trying to open a nut with a log. It’s the wrong tool for the job; the fragile wood repeatedly breaks into pieces. Even when he finally figures out that only a rock can crack a nut, he learns the hard way that the other chimps aren’t familiar with the concept of sharing. If you leave a tool unattended, someone will come along and take it. And then there are the chimps that choose the wrong rocks, which are quite susceptible to chipping and end up doing nothing to the nut.
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| Release: | April 20, 2012 |
| Rating: | G |
| Studio: | Disneynature |
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Written by Chris Pandolfi (editor-at-large)
The Disneynature documentaries had me initially. Their first two releases,
Earth and Oceans, were marvelous films; I was especially taken with the latter,
not only because it was a spectacular showcase of underwater footage but also
because it raised awareness about the negative and positive effects we have on
the environment. But then came last year’s
African Cats, and while the visuals
were undoubtedly stunning, I believed the filmmakers went too far in their
efforts to make it a dramatic narrative, which sort of goes against what
documentaries set out to do. Now we have Chimpanzee. Although
it suffers from some of the same problems as African Cats, namely the use of
inherently manipulative narrative techniques, the film is a definite
improvement. If they keep it up, Disneynature might have me again completely by
next year.
Filmed over three years in the rainforests of the Ivory Coast and Uganda,
Chimpanzee documents the life of a young chimp named Oscar. I have no way of
knowing if his name – and, indeed, all the names applied to the chimps appearing
in this film – was bestowed by Disney, the filmmakers, or someone working for
the Jane Goodall Institute, the latter being one of the production entities. I
suppose it doesn’t really matter, seeing as names do make it much easier to
identify specific subjects. Oscar is raised by his mother, Isha, in a tribe of
chimps ruled over by the alpha male, Freddy. Survival depends in part on knowing
where to gather food, and it’s the time of year when nuts are ready for
harvesting. Unfortunately, this nut tree is located away from the safety of
their territory, where they will be vulnerable to a rival tribe of chimps led by
the aged Scar (a name that surely must have been influenced by Disney).

One of Scar’s attacks results in Isha getting separated from Oscar. Although
we see nothing, narrator Tim Allen plainly states that Isha sustained heavy
injuries and ultimately died. Oscar, being too young to fend for himself,
becomes desperately malnourished. He’s rejected by the other mothers of the
tribe, as they have their own children to look after. Astonishingly, he’s
eventually taken in by Freddy, who up until then showed not the slightest
interest in any of the young chimps, let alone Oscar. He feeds him, grooms him,
and lets him ride on his back, just as mom used to do. But Freddy’s newfound
paternal instincts threaten the safety of the tribe; he isn’t as watchful and
attentive as he once was. Will he be able to protect his chimps from Scar and
his tribe?
The film is at its best when it shows the chimps engaging in their daily
rituals, including grooming, foraging for food, and using rocks, logs, and twigs
as primitive tools. The latter allows for a few scenes of levity. It takes the
right tools and years of practice to be able to crack a nut open, and it’s
obvious that some chimps aren’t as quick to learn as others. One chimp has the
darnedest time trying to open a nut with a log. It’s the wrong tool for the job;
the fragile wood repeatedly breaks into pieces. Even when he finally figures out
that only a rock can crack a nut, he learns the hard way that the other chimps
aren’t familiar with the concept of sharing. If you leave a tool unattended,
someone will come along and take it. And then there are the chimps that choose
the wrong rocks, which are quite susceptible to chipping and end up doing
nothing to the nut.
Allen’s narration is easily the most unique of the Disneynature
documentaries. This isn’t to say it’s the most successful. Although he has a
pleasant and distinct style of delivery, and although he generally gets by,
there’s a casual quality to his voice that somehow doesn’t quite do the material
justice. There’s a presence, but there isn’t much authority. There are times
when he piles on the comedy a little too thickly, as when he verbalizes a
chimp’s “thoughts” on the basis of its actions. It’s amusing at best, although
it doesn’t take long before it comes off as disingenuous to the genre and
condescending to the filmmakers, who clearly put a lot of time and effort into
capturing the footage.
Indeed, there’s a compelling (if brief) montage of behind-the-scenes footage
shown during the end credits, in which we clearly see the filmmakers struggling
with thick foliage, uneven terrain, and insect invasions. Even then, it’s shown
in the best possible light; everyone who appears on camera is usually laughing.
It’s obvious that Chimpanzee was nothing if not a labor of
love. The screening I attended was introduced by executive producer Don Hahn,
who told the audience that some of the film was shot while Uganda was in the
middle of a civil war. That in and of itself would have made for a very
interesting documentary, but I won’t go off on a tangent. While not the best of
Disneynature’s offerings, Chimpanzee is informative, entertaining, and visually
striking.

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