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Bear Country is a 1953 American short documentary film directed by James Algar.It won an Oscar at the 26th Academy Awards in 1954 for Best Short Subject (Two-Reel). [1] [2] The film was produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries, [3] and played with Peter Pan [4] during its original theatrical run.
True-Life Adventures is a series of short and full-length nature documentary films released by Walt Disney Studios between the years 1948 and 1960. [1] The first seven films released were thirty-minute shorts, with the subsequent seven films being full features.
This is chronological list of adventure films split by decade. Often there may be considerable overlap particularly between adventure and other genres (including, action , drama , and fantasy films ); the list documents films which are more closely related to adventure, even if they bend genres.
Oscilloscope Laboratories has landed “Canary,” a documentary about a climate scientist who been referred to as “the closest living thing to Indiana Jones.” Danny O’Malley, a producer on ...
Image credits: Detroit Photograph Company "There was a two-color process invented around 1913 by Kodak that used two glass plates in contact with each other, one being red-orange and the other ...
Homemakers, children, and other household members would sit on the stoop outside their home to relax, and greet neighbors passing by. Similarly, while on an errand, one would stop and converse with neighbors sitting on their stoops. Within an urban community, stoop conversations helped to disseminate gossip and reaffirm casual relationships.
A porch pirate who was caught on a Ring doorbell camera twerking after stealing packages from a New Jersey home returned to the victim’s residence several days later to whine about the video ...
Martin Elmer Johnson (October 9, 1884 – January 13, 1937) and Osa Helen Johnson (née Leighty, March 14, 1894 – January 7, 1953) were married American adventurers and documentary filmmakers. In the first half of the 20th century the couple captured the public's imagination through their films and books of adventure in exotic, faraway lands.