La Baleine Blanche 1987 |work| Guide
The French film database AlloCiné lists a second 1987 film called "Les Baleines Blanches." This is a French release of the Icelandic film , the directorial debut of Fridrik Thor Fridriksson. Fridriksson went on to direct Children of Nature (1991), Iceland's first-ever Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Language Film.
Peut-être que la baleine blanche est un spécimen unique, un erratique qui a quitté son habitat naturel pour explorer d'autres eaux. Ou peut-être qu'elle est un hybride, un mutant ou même un spécimen appartenant à une espèce inconnue.
Jacques Lanzmann (original novel/adaptation), Jean Kerchbron, and Pierre Lary Music Composer: Michel Legrand Original Air Date: November 26, 1987 (France) la baleine blanche 1987
For the collector, the cinephile, or the curious environmentalist, the search for this film becomes a reflection of the film’s own theme: the fine line between healthy passion and destructive obsession.
Avez-vous d'autres questions sur ce film ou d'autres curiosités télévisuelles des années 80 ? The French film database AlloCiné lists a second
For a documentary from the late 80s, the underwater cinematography is strikingly clear and atmospheric. The film takes full advantage of the Beluga’s natural habitat—the icy, turquoise waters of the Arctic and sub-Arctic.
Upon release, La Baleine Blanche was considered a noble failure. Le Devoir called it "beautiful but bewildering." Variety (in a rare review of a Quebec film) said it "sinks under its own symbolism." Ou peut-être qu'elle est un hybride, un mutant
In early 1987, reports began to trickle in from shocked locals near the mouth of the Seine. They claimed to see a ghostly, pale figure surfacing in the murky river water. By the time scientists arrived, the reality was confirmed. A beluga whale—an Arctic species that typically inhabits the icy waters of the far north—had navigated hundreds of miles off course, entering the river at Le Havre and swimming inland toward Rouen.
The production brought together a notable cast of French veteran actors and rising stars: Jean Kerchbron Jean Kerchbron, Jacques Lanzmann, and Pierre Lary Composed by the Academy Award-winner Michel Legrand Jacques Fabbri Yann Debray Dany Saval Bernard Alane as Rodolphe Anne Fontaine as Claudine Jacques Mauclair as Docteur Lournel Technical Details imdb.only-tv-v.txt
La calidad de La Baleine Blanche estuvo respaldada por nombres notables del panorama cultural francés de la época:
The visual contrast is the film's strongest asset. The "white whale" is filmed against the dark, deep blues of the ocean and the stark whites of the polar ice. The camera work is patient, often shooting in close-up to capture the unique facial expressions of the Beluga. Unlike other whales that appear stiff and robotic, Belugas have flexible necks and expressive foreheads; the documentary captures this beautifully, anthropomorphizing the whales just enough to make the audience empathize with them without turning it into a cartoon.










