Explores the urgent effort to understand and recover resident orcas of…
Tahlequah the Whale: A Dance of Grief
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In the aftermath of her newborn baby’s sudden death, orca mother Tahlequah carries her daughter’s body across the Salish Sea in the incredible true story that captivated the world.
Dr. Jane Goodall, Ph.D., DBE
"How beautiful, how sad, and what a powerful message."
Animayo International Film Festival
"This deeply moving short film has managed to captivate us with its powerful and emotional narrative [and] stunning visual beauty. This masterpiece [...] includes narration by Daniel Kreizberg himself, who not only directs but also lends his voice to guide the audience through this emotional journey."
Lynda Mapes, Environmental Reporter for The Seattle Times & Author of Orca: Shared Waters, Shared Home
"What a beautiful tribute you and your team have created, thank you for this act of beauty and kindness. Entirely accurate, deeply moving, you have made an important and lasting contribution."
Lori Marino, Founder & President of the Whale Sanctuary Project
"I cannot express how moving this film is. We at the Whale Sanctuary Project joined the world, and you, in watching the 'tour of grief' that Tahlequah displayed. We'll never know why her daughter died, but it is clear that our species is harming that community of beings. You and your team have captured the poignancy of the southern residents and Tahlequah and I can't thank you enough for placing all of this within human responsibility."
Jeanne Hyde, Orca Documentarian at The Whale Museum, Friday Harbor, WA
"Thank you, Daniel, and everyone who participated in the creation of this film. Every bit of it is stunning and powerful. You created something beautiful out of such sadness and grief. And how you brought it into the struggles of present times. Heartfelt to the core. WOW!"
Mary Jo Farrer, Orca Adoption Program Manager at The Whale Museum, Friday Harbor, WA
"Thank you for bringing Tahlequah's story forward in this authentic portrayal. It is an emotional tribute to the culture and beauty of the Southern Residents."
Berit N. Legrand, Founder of The Animal Fund
"Tahlequah the Whale: A Dance of Grief beautifully captures the story of Tahlequah, showcasing the emotional depth, motherhood, compassion, and intelligence of orcas. It seamlessly weaves in an educational narrative about the unprotected ocean and its impact on wildlife. This powerful message inspires action and reflection. The film is exceptionally well-made, with exquisite illustrations and accompanied by a magnificent orchestral score that enhances every moment. Every detail is meticulously thought out, making it a truly impressive experience. Thank you for creating such an impactful film. I hope it reaches audiences far and wide."
Damián Perea, Founder of the Animayo International Film Festival
"This film is very emotional. It touched my heart and moved me."
Dr. Gretchen Coffman, Ph.D., International Ocean Film Festival
"This film intertwines the heart-wrenching journey of orca mother Tahlequah [...] with broader human tales of loss. [...] With stunning frame-by-frame animation, this poignant story explores grief, resilience, and our collective responsibility towards the planet's future."
Caroline Audibert, Journalist for Monaco Ocean Week
"An animated short film that depicts the tragic fate of a mother orca and her calf, an ecological fable illustrating the vulnerability of a species increasingly exposed to the industrial ills of the ocean. The maternal instinct of the large marine mammal is equally honored in this short masterpiece [...] of high emotional intensity."
Earth In Focus Singapore Nature Film Festival
"A breathtaking film enriched with stunning animation and evocative music, vividly bringing Tahlequah's story to life. The film masterfully conveys deep emotions, bringing tears to the audience's eyes and inspiring them to take action for these magnificent creatures and their habitat. Kudos to the entire team for creating such a remarkable film!"
Greg Reitman, Founder of the Blue Water Film Festival
"Daniel Kreizberg's Tahlequah is emotional, insightful and impactful."
Sehsüchte International Student Film Festival
"A visceral story about loss and love."
Wildlife Vaasa International Nature Film Festival
"Through this artistic tribute, Tahlequah's legacy lives on, touching hearts and reminding us of the interconnectedness of all life."
Noelle Melody, Animation Programmer at Woodstock Film Festival
"We just want to say how much we loved this film, truly one of our top choices in this year's Woodstock Film Festival Animation program. It was an honor to share Tahlequah's story and have you there to speak with the audience."
Joy Buran, Animation Programmer at Woodstock Film Festival
"Thank you, Daniel, for making this. Whenever we speak of your film to others, it is always through tears. A stunning work of both overcoming loss and hope for the future."
Taxidrivers Magazine, reporting from the Lucca Film Festival
"A fabulous and moving story of pain and hope" that "imaginatively fictionalizes a tragic true story."
Conrado Xalabarder, Mundo BSO
"A beautiful symphonic creation that [...] achieves great emotional expressiveness."
Anton Smit, Soundtrack World
"[A] stunning score. The story is sad and beautiful at the same time, and the gorgeous and emotional lines Ritmanis wrote are a perfect fit, in which you can hear the grief and love from a mother to her lost child."
Jonathan Broxton, Movie Music UK
"[An] astonishingly beautiful score [...] lush, lyrical, emotional, passionate [...] painting a lovely portrait of love and loss in the animal kingdom. The cello writing in "A Mother Mourns" is especially striking for its emotional resonance. The violin performance of the main theme in "A Phoenix Rises" is staggeringly beautiful, a hauntingly appropriate tribute to the depth of feeling between a mother and her child."
Marc Bekoff, Ph.D., author of "The Emotional Lives of Animals"
"Daniel Kreizberg's award-winning film Tahlequah the Whale: A Dance of Grief clearly shows that orcas and other animals have rich and deep emotional lives, and that we therefore must treat them with compassion and kindness. Kreizberg's work is a game-changer that will significantly help people see orcas not as unfeeling objects or property, but as unquestionably deeply sentient individuals who care about what happens to themselves, their family, and others."
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Distributor subjects
Southern Resident Orcas; Environmental Pollution; Animal Grief; The Plight of a Critically Endangered Species; Protecting Marine HabitatsKeywords
00:00:47.220 --> 00:00:50.255
- [Narrator] The Orcinus orca
00:00:50.255 --> 00:00:52.016
has a recorded lifespan
00:00:52.016 --> 00:00:55.083
of up to nearly a century.
00:00:57.240 --> 00:01:00.704
These apex predators,
00:01:00.704 --> 00:01:03.063
technically members of the dolphin family,
00:01:04.320 --> 00:01:06.993
are sometimes called killer whales.
00:01:07.980 --> 00:01:09.600
But there is more to them
00:01:09.600 --> 00:01:12.420
than their aquatic dominance.
00:01:12.420 --> 00:01:15.630
Their brains are among
the largest on the Earth.
00:01:15.630 --> 00:01:16.590
And they are renowned
00:01:16.590 --> 00:01:19.830
for their sense of play, curiosity,
00:01:19.830 --> 00:01:22.110
and intricate social structures
00:01:22.110 --> 00:01:24.093
that last a lifetime.
00:01:25.710 --> 00:01:27.240
While we are only beginning
00:01:27.240 --> 00:01:28.890
to understand the nuances
00:01:28.890 --> 00:01:30.780
of how they socialize,
00:01:30.780 --> 00:01:32.100
what we do recognize
00:01:32.100 --> 00:01:34.860
is how powerful a bond exists
00:01:34.860 --> 00:01:37.773
between mother and child.
00:01:57.930 --> 00:02:01.383
July 24th, 2018.
00:02:02.220 --> 00:02:06.300
J35, also known as Tahlequah,
00:02:06.300 --> 00:02:07.500
swims in the waters
00:02:07.500 --> 00:02:09.660
by Vancouver, British Columbia
00:02:09.660 --> 00:02:11.550
and Seattle, Washington
00:02:11.550 --> 00:02:13.593
comprising the Salish Sea.
00:02:16.110 --> 00:02:17.580
In the company of her fellow
00:02:17.580 --> 00:02:19.770
southern resident orcas,
00:02:19.770 --> 00:02:23.403
she has just given birth to a female calf.
00:02:24.690 --> 00:02:26.490
Having delivered a healthy male
00:02:26.490 --> 00:02:27.810
eight years ago,
00:02:27.810 --> 00:02:30.300
this offspring comes after roughly
00:02:30.300 --> 00:02:33.213
seventeen months of pregnancy.
00:02:57.784 --> 00:02:59.580
This opportunity for the pod
00:02:59.580 --> 00:03:01.748
to grow once more
00:03:01.748 --> 00:03:05.430
follows three consecutive
years of pregnancies
00:03:05.430 --> 00:03:07.713
failing to survive to term.
00:03:13.920 --> 00:03:16.290
For this endangered species,
00:03:16.290 --> 00:03:20.010
these losses come as little surprise,
00:03:20.010 --> 00:03:23.070
given the many threats
southern residents face
00:03:23.070 --> 00:03:25.263
as the planet's most urban orcas.
00:04:07.565 --> 00:04:10.380
While the pod might experience this birth
00:04:10.380 --> 00:04:13.683
as a triumph against continuing adversity,
00:04:15.037 --> 00:04:18.513
their celebration will be temporary.
00:04:45.390 --> 00:04:47.700
We do not know for certain
00:04:47.700 --> 00:04:50.373
what caused this newborn's death.
00:05:00.600 --> 00:05:02.970
Unwilling to surrender her child
00:05:02.970 --> 00:05:05.220
to the depths of the sea,
00:05:05.220 --> 00:05:08.943
her mother does the only thing she can.
00:05:18.960 --> 00:05:21.240
This ritual of mourning
00:05:21.240 --> 00:05:22.710
is not unheard of among
00:05:22.710 --> 00:05:24.723
newly bereaved orcas.
00:05:37.500 --> 00:05:39.180
In doing this,
00:05:39.180 --> 00:05:41.190
perhaps Tahlequah is expressing
00:05:41.190 --> 00:05:43.072
a kind of denial,
00:05:43.072 --> 00:05:47.214
hoping against hope that her
daughter take breath once more.
00:05:53.130 --> 00:05:55.500
Whatever her true intentions,
00:05:55.500 --> 00:05:58.653
she simply cannot let her go.
00:06:22.590 --> 00:06:26.613
Forgoing sleep and adequate
nourishment for days,
00:06:27.750 --> 00:06:31.023
she refuses to relent.
00:06:36.571 --> 00:06:39.810
Losing strength as she travels dozens,
00:06:39.810 --> 00:06:42.660
and then, hundreds, of miles,
00:06:42.660 --> 00:06:45.153
an entire week passes.
00:06:50.430 --> 00:06:52.590
The support of her pod,
00:06:52.590 --> 00:06:54.540
which monitors her from afar
00:06:54.540 --> 00:06:56.570
and sometimes intervenes,
00:06:56.570 --> 00:06:59.580
can little alleviate her burden.
00:07:08.630 --> 00:07:11.861
Soon, it has been 10 days.
00:07:14.713 --> 00:07:17.736
And then, two weeks.
00:07:28.440 --> 00:07:31.623
Exhausted, hungry,
00:07:32.640 --> 00:07:35.553
and at risk of serious injury,
00:07:36.870 --> 00:07:41.820
it would seem that her
life has come to this:
00:07:43.563 --> 00:07:46.203
a dance of grief.
00:08:20.383 --> 00:08:22.230
Perhaps she does not want to live
00:08:22.230 --> 00:08:24.080
in a world without the child
00:08:24.080 --> 00:08:26.490
in whom she saw herself,
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on whom she pinned her hopes,
00:08:29.250 --> 00:08:31.170
to whom she now intends
00:08:31.170 --> 00:08:34.557
to give the last full measure
00:08:34.557 --> 00:08:36.643
of her aching love.
00:08:47.640 --> 00:08:52.250
After traveling over one thousand miles
00:08:52.250 --> 00:08:55.491
across seventeen days,
00:08:55.491 --> 00:08:57.112
on August 10th,
00:08:57.990 --> 00:09:01.623
in desperate need of food and rest,
00:09:02.460 --> 00:09:05.553
she releases her child's body
00:09:05.553 --> 00:09:08.758
back to the place from which it came.
00:09:30.690 --> 00:09:33.120
Only twenty years of age,
00:09:33.120 --> 00:09:36.149
Tahlequah may carry this broken heart
00:09:36.149 --> 00:09:38.763
for eighty more years.
00:09:41.160 --> 00:09:44.823
And as she wanders the
ocean she calls home,
00:09:45.720 --> 00:09:47.869
will she be haunted
00:09:47.869 --> 00:09:49.323
by all that could have been?
00:09:52.650 --> 00:09:55.080
Will she be crushed
00:09:55.080 --> 00:09:57.576
by the weight of her longing?
00:10:00.900 --> 00:10:03.633
Will her undying love
00:10:05.608 --> 00:10:06.958
ever be heard?
00:10:12.240 --> 00:10:14.700
But little does she know,
00:10:14.700 --> 00:10:19.115
her daughter's journey
has not reached its end.
00:10:24.600 --> 00:10:27.720
It will take several days for her body
00:10:27.720 --> 00:10:30.213
to find the sandy seabed.
00:10:37.618 --> 00:10:39.210
When it does,
00:10:39.210 --> 00:10:43.263
it is there that her final act begins.
00:11:02.550 --> 00:11:03.843
On her travels,
00:11:04.830 --> 00:11:07.136
Tahlequah could give up hope
00:11:07.136 --> 00:11:08.940
that her daughter's life amounted
00:11:08.940 --> 00:11:12.663
to anything more than pain and absence.
00:11:13.770 --> 00:11:16.920
But her grief cannot limit
00:11:16.920 --> 00:11:20.073
the scope of what is possible.
00:11:22.050 --> 00:11:24.720
One day, she is certain to encounter
00:11:24.720 --> 00:11:27.063
the spot she will never forget,
00:11:28.140 --> 00:11:29.700
and should she look down
00:11:29.700 --> 00:11:32.550
to the ocean floor below,
00:11:32.550 --> 00:11:35.660
she might just see...
00:12:11.970 --> 00:12:14.970
In 2020, Tahlequah,
00:12:14.970 --> 00:12:17.850
after rejoining the activities of her pod
00:12:17.850 --> 00:12:20.280
and regaining her strength,
00:12:20.280 --> 00:12:23.250
gave birth to a healthy son.
00:12:23.250 --> 00:12:26.880
His name is Phoenix.
00:12:26.880 --> 00:12:30.450
If he and future offspring survive,
00:12:30.450 --> 00:12:33.420
his family may be able to rise
00:12:33.420 --> 00:12:37.123
from the ashes of loss and endure.
00:12:38.370 --> 00:12:40.440
But since it is human activity
00:12:40.440 --> 00:12:42.000
that imperils them,
00:12:42.000 --> 00:12:45.033
their fate is in our hands.
00:12:45.870 --> 00:12:50.313
While the window to act
might one day slip away,
00:12:51.150 --> 00:12:53.135
it is not yet too late.
00:12:54.150 --> 00:12:55.950
And we have the power
00:12:55.950 --> 00:12:59.253
to not only protect our orca kin,
00:13:00.090 --> 00:13:01.840
we can even save
00:13:02.848 --> 00:13:03.948
ourselves.
Distributor: GOOD DOCS
Length: 14 minutes
Date: 2023
Genre: Animation
Language: English
Grade: 6-12, College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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