(1971)

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6/10
Say Goodbye.
richardson-caz30 September 2008
I can remember watching this documentary on TV on or near it's release. I was in my early teens then and was totally shocked by some of the graphic scenes that were shown, numerous scenes that today would not escape the censors. One particular scene I remember is a female Polar Bear being shot and as it lay dying calling to its 2 cubs to run for their lives to escape the guns. The Seal Cull already mentioned was also very brutal and Prairy Dogs being shot as they appear from their burrows. Some of these scenes were shown in slow motion making the effect even more dramatic for want of a better word. A very upsetting experience back then and one which I'm sure I couldn't put myself through again, animal lovers stay well away.
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8/10
One of the most important moments of my youth
jenirvin1 October 2007
Granted, I'm basing my star recommendation on memory only, and in the context of being an 8-year-old kid watching this film during school in the '70s (so I knocked a couple stars off for the film potentially being outdated). However, this film made a huge impact on my life. It's hard to watch, graphic, and raw - and very important. This is no watered-down version of man vs. animal, or the cruelty that we can inflict. As such, we were given a choice whether to stay and watch the film or leave the classroom while it ran. I'm glad I stayed, as (as you can tell) the impact of the film has stayed with me to this day. I recall the scenes of the baby seals being clubbed, a giraffe (maybe?) who had a spear thrown at her (as I recall it was a female...) which stuck in her neck but didn't kill her until days later after a long chase while she slowly bled to death. An important work with an important message, which sadly is probably still as relevant today as it was 30 years ago.
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A Haunting Film
16mm-215 January 2010
Literally.

For some reason, out of nowhere, the title song of this film - and memories of the footage - recently came back to haunt me. (The reason may be pretty easy to explain: I just underwent surgery, and anesthesia has some funny ways of shaking things loose.) As so many did, I saw - probably projected - this film as a kid, on 16mm as it made the school rounds during the seventies. (I'd love to have a reasonably decent print in 16mm today, as I still own a couple of projectors and occasionally exorcize the 16mm demons.) The film (and memories thereof) was all the more haunting as the optical track was influenced by the legendarily awful wow & flutter and sub-par amplification and speaker system of the Bell & Howell Specialists it was most commonly run through.

Some four decades later I wonder if adult eyes might see sensationalism where twelve year old eyes were shocked, but you can't fake *all* that footage. A truly wonderful film albeit in a horrible way. Forgive me, but the "Schindler's List" of nature films.

Thanks to the good old IMDb for letting me get this out.
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1/10
Hard piece of propaganda
drjukebox23 December 2015
I remember very well the effect this film had on me and many of my friends at the time. It was set to make us opposed to hunting in all forms and shapes. Perhaps it has a part in shaping some of the movements we see today especially among young people, who are vegans and anti violence, anti research, anti meat production, and anti a lot of things. Although they likely never have seen or heard of this movie.

Those who write here that several of the species portrayed in the movie are now extinct - which species are you talking about? Take polar bears - they have QUADRUPLED in numbers since 1960, because they are no longer hunted (and perhaps this film contributed to ending the hunt?). Are there any other species in the movie that have been eradicated? I don't think so. It is just a fiction of your mind. I remember one thing in particular about this movie - it was one voice that said that it was "ALREADY TOO LATE". I had to think about that. If it was too late, then why not just relax and enjoy what there is? We can't do anything anyway. That was my first contact with the apocalyptic visions that are common among environmentalists. These days, they are everywhere, with the fears for climate change. I have grown to become very skeptic of these movements, that I was once a very active part of. As a piece of propaganda, even Oliver Stone would have been proud of "Say Goodbye".
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8/10
"Say Goodbye" Never forgot this film...
villdina24 July 2013
I also saw this film way back in the 70's. I was in the 4th grade.

I have never been able to get the visions out of my head or the song. It was a great film... but not good for a girl my age to see. Maybe when kids are a little older. It was full of very sad shots of animals being killed in very unkind ways. The movie was very bloody.

I had a teacher named Mr. Hexsum...? He was great...but the movie... just odd. I lived in Auburn, CA at the time.

Then right after the movie... we were sent to lunch & I remember specifically having french fries and getting the ketchup which after watching the film...looked like blood....
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8/10
Memorable part of my youth
levinbluebird1 December 2010
I remember seeing this film at Science Camp and years later, showing it to kids at the camp myself as a naturalist. Other more experienced naturalists rattled off the changes that had taken place since the film had been published. It was printed in 1971 and by 1982 when I showed it, many of the species said to be in danger were extinct. I'll always remember that the first reel contained all the graphic images and we could relax for the second half. I remember hearing on the news that a study had been conducted showing that graphic environmental films were not effective because people tended to shut out the images from their mind soon afterward. I knew as soon as I heard it that they had to be referring to this film. It was the year that I was a naturalist that the decision was made to stop showing it. It was so violent. The most memorable image was a long view of a prairie dog standing on it's hind legs watching for danger and suddenly it exploded into bits. It had been shot by a rancher concerned that his cows would trip in their burrows. I was always conflicted at the conundrum, knowing that you are trying to show the graphic nature of a horrific act like that, and yet not stopping it but rather catching it on film. I give my high rating not because it was such a beautifully made film or that it's violent nature was the best way to wake us up. I give it because the film tried so hard at the start of the environmental movement to show us uncomfortable images of what was really out there, things that most people would never see. It is quite outdated now. Hell, it was outdated just 12 years after it was made because it was showing animals that were not long for the world. A similar film could be made today with the lessons learned from all those years ago. Remember that this film was made in the years leading up to the landmark legislation of 1974 that would ultimately reverse the destruction of Lake Erie and in what were actually much more smoggy skies of the 1970s compared to today. It seems ironic that all those years ago, people had to demand pollution controls to clean up the air when today, there are those that would tell you that such controls should be dropped because they don't believe the dire consequences said to befall us without them. This was an important film.
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Made a mark on me
dpframing7 February 2016
I saw this on TV when I was 13. It made such an impression on me ("these flying birds are Japanese Ibis. There are only 13 left in the world. You are now seeing 8 of them.") Very powerful. So much so that I wrote to the address at the end of the film and ordered 30 pamphlets of "Say Goodbye" and spoke on the film as a class project while passing out the pamphlets to my classmates. I would give my eye teeth to find a copy of one of those pamphlets . They had a little picture in the center of the front cover of a polar bear cub sitting on the tundra. The picture was taken right after his mother was killed from an airplane. The film was narrated by Rod McKuen, a poet at the time. This film made me respect animals for the rest of my life and I am 58 now.
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10/10
At age 9,this film moved me from wildlife enthusiast to serious conservationist.
whatwudevr15 January 2020
This landmark documentary had a profound impact on my whole being. The fearless makers had the insight, foresight & the passion to come right out & say what needed to be said & done. The dedcation & compassion of the Craigheads was life affirming. This site is one of few to acknowledge the films' existence. Sad, pathetic, outrageous. I challenge anyone in the bloody world to do the right thing & share a copy of this awesome film.
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A good educational film about our environment
Coolguy-729 December 1999
I saw this film on a 16mm film in 3rd grade when my teacher showed it to us. It's tells you what's happening to our world's animals. It's also pretty graphic. In fact, too graphic for 3rd graders. We have a scene with poachers beating seals to death. Those big jerks! Of course, it was probably a reenactment and they were not using real seals. Of course, this film was made in 1970 and I saw it 20 years after it was made (in 1990). A lot could've changed between now and then, but we still need to protect our environment and save our animal friends.
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Proven fake back in the 1970s
ranix19468 November 2018
The hunting of the polar bear was a bear tagging operation. When the "hunter" raises and shoots his rifle you can actually see the dart fly out of the bore. The "death" scene is a fake (the moma bear was drugged) designed to inflame anti-hunting and anti-gun passions at the time coming just a few years after the John and Bobby killings.
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this film ruined my life
artsyman14 April 2022
Really my girlfriend and I were filmmakers at a young age of 16 and watching this film numerous times affected us to mimick perhaps this film that with out blaming her her demands to make this film that ended my filmmaking that was the last film i was ever to make untill many years later the last 8mm film that is. At any rate it also was a giant problem in our relationship and we broke up this film really in effect ruined my life.

I hated her for having me be a part of making of her film but she had worked on about 4 of my films with me so i gave in.
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