Movie |
Warthog | Parent Child Relationship
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7.2/10
IMDbSleeper of the Year | 1967
Top Ten Films | 1967
Feature Film Classic | 1990
Best Motion Picture Drama | 1967
Best Actress Drama | 1967 | Virginia
Best Original Song | 1967
Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or Television Show | 1967 | John
Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | 1967 | James
Elsa's grave is located in Meru National Park, Kenya.
The lions "Boy", "Girl" and "Ugas" were freed upon the completion of production, under protest from the film company who wanted to sell the lions to zoos to recoup some of their money from filming.
The theme song was not heard on the original British release of the film, although it later won the Academy Award for Best Song.
After the filming of Born Free was completed, George Adamson started a lion reserve, Kora Reserve, in Kenya. He founded it specifically to help rehabilitate the lions used in the film. A documentary, The Lions Are Free (1967), was made about him and the reserve, and tells what happened to the lions Boy, Girl, Ugas, Mara, Henrietta, and Little Elsa, and other lions that appeared in the first film.
The real-life Adamsons, George and Joy, were not the blissful couple portrayed on screen, with Joy's rather headstrong and sometimes bullying attitude becoming such an annoyance that she was banned from the set.
"Joy Adamson: Elsa, Elsa [Joy cries sitting out on the hood of the truck as they ride in search of the young lioness] George Adamson: Let's try this. [2 shots ring out from his gun. George sees Elsa stumbling through the grass, approaching their vehicle] Joy Adamson: all my nightmares had come true. [Now Elsa rests in their tent as they argue over her] George Adamson: ...she can't make it. she can't think. she can't mix with her own kind... She can't do anything the wild animals do to survive. You've done too good a job on her. You've made her tame. It's too late to try to let her go wild now. All we're doing is making her miserable, torturing her. How could you be so cruel? Joy Adamson: You keep quiet George. George Adamson: I don't know what goes on in that head of yours anymore... What's wrong with a zoo, anyway? Joy Adamson: nothing. Except that she won't be free. George Adamson: and Is freedom so important? Joy Adamson: yes, yes, she was born free and she has the right to live free. Why don't we live in a more comfortable setting George? Other people do. We chose to live out here cause it represents freedom for us. Because we can breathe. George Adamson: Joy, tell me the truth. You just don't want to give her up. What you're really hoping is that she can stay out here, wild, but not too wild. That you can see her every now and then. Joy Adamson: it's not the whole truth. But I don't deny I'd like it. George Adamson: it's impossible. It cannot happen. Joy Adamson: ...at least she would be free. At least she wouldn't be in a cage for the rest of her life. George Adamson: even if she gets herself killed in the process. Joy Adamson: [stroking Elsa's leg] I'd never forgive myself I suppose. [Joy narrates] Joy Adamson: although at one time we were afraid she'd die, Elsa did recover. And when she did, she seemed somehow different."