Blackfish is a documentary made in 2013 about Orca or Killer Whales (although they are actually dolphins) in the marine park Seaworld, and presents I think a compelling case about how unsuited they are to a life in captivity.
Seaworld comes across as a business where Public Relations is everything, and the real truth is to be avoided, even when the safety of their trainers is at stake. In that respect, I think it could be taken as an example of what goes on in many other corporations and governments also, not just marine parks.
The documentary interviews many ex-trainers who used to work for Seaworld, and covers the deaths of some trainers at Seaworld and whether they were really "trainer error" or "accidents" or on the other hand deliberate acts by killer whales that had become psychotic through their life in captivity. (There are no known reports of wild orca attacking humans, although they do eat seals.)
Other interesting interviews are with a man who worked on an OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Authority) legal case against Seaworld, and with a man who caught a young Orca from a pod of adults back in the 1980s, and now considers it the worst thing he ever did.
It also presents evidence about the strong family bonds orcas have, their intelligence, and suggests they may even have a strong emotional life.
The documentary maker didn't come from any animal rights background or any particular organization like PETA or SAFE, but began the film to try and answer the question of what really happened in the death of Seaworld trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010.
_http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2545118/?ref_=nv_sr_1
Seaworld comes across as a business where Public Relations is everything, and the real truth is to be avoided, even when the safety of their trainers is at stake. In that respect, I think it could be taken as an example of what goes on in many other corporations and governments also, not just marine parks.
The documentary interviews many ex-trainers who used to work for Seaworld, and covers the deaths of some trainers at Seaworld and whether they were really "trainer error" or "accidents" or on the other hand deliberate acts by killer whales that had become psychotic through their life in captivity. (There are no known reports of wild orca attacking humans, although they do eat seals.)
Other interesting interviews are with a man who worked on an OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Authority) legal case against Seaworld, and with a man who caught a young Orca from a pod of adults back in the 1980s, and now considers it the worst thing he ever did.
It also presents evidence about the strong family bonds orcas have, their intelligence, and suggests they may even have a strong emotional life.
The documentary maker didn't come from any animal rights background or any particular organization like PETA or SAFE, but began the film to try and answer the question of what really happened in the death of Seaworld trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010.
_http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2545118/?ref_=nv_sr_1