Scene 1: The little bear lies beside the mother bear who was crushed to death by the boulder, and is still catching the flying butterflies like a child.
Scene 2: Little Bear, despite Big Bear's roar, still came to Big Bear's side to lick the blood from the wound for Big Bear.
Scene 3: After becoming a partner, the big bear catches the little bear, and the little bear just bites one, and the other is thrown in front of it.
Scene 4: When the big bear is courting, the little bear learns to shake the tree by the side.
Shot 5: The phantom the bear saw after eating the colorful mushrooms—the mushroom turned into a butterfly
Shot 6: The little bear saw the mother bear's skin at the hunter's camp and tried to bite off the rope around her neck. In the morning, the hunter found the little bear lying on the bear Mom slept soundly beside her.
Scene 7: The little bear tries to protect himself from the attack of the jaguar.
. . . . . .
I really admire the director's understanding of Jacques' imagination of animals. In the film, Little Bear had two dreams.
Dream 1: Many frogs with ferocious faces and fangs, turned into devils and jumped into the water. - A hungry and scared bear, with no food and no water.
Dream 2: The mother still ate honey as at the beginning, and then the boulder crushed the mother bear to death, and the mother bear turned into a god and stood on the cliff. ——The little bear lying next to the big bear thought of his mother, as if his mother was still alive.
View more about The Bear reviews