Salt Water Moose, a
Canadian production, is a family film about two youngsters who
decide to become matchmakers for a stranded moose. During one
particularly frozen winter in Nova Scotia, a moose wandered
across a frozen bay and ended up on a little island called
Dead Man's Rock off the coast of a small village. After the
spring thaw, the moose was stranded on the island with lots to
eat, but no companionship. A local girl, Jo, befriends the
moose, names him Bonnie Prince Charles and proceeds to
mastermind a plan to bring him a moose princess.
When a writer from
Toronto decides to write a novel, she and her son, Bobby, go
to spend the summer at her childhood home in Nova Scotia. The
writer, Eva, is trying to recoup from her divorce, while Bobby
tries to deal with the pain of being separated from his
father. The small coastal town is a far cry from the life he
knew in bustling Toronto and he feels out of place. He is
befriended by Jo and her widower father, Lester. Soon we learn
that Lester and Eva knew each other when they were growing up
and are happy that their children have become friends.
In introducing Bobby
to the local area, Jo takes him on a boat ride to the island.
As they walk the island, they encounter Bonnie Prince Charles
in a pasture. Jo recounts the story of how he became stranded
and her plan to find him a mate. She convinces Bobby to help
her capture a female moose, build a raft to carry the moose
across the bay and deliver her to Charlie. Lester teaches
Bobby moose calls and soon a moose princess appears in the
woods. They manage to enclose her in a forest area surrounded
by fish netting, bringing her maple leaves to eat and binding
her newly formed horns with a silk scarf. Eventually they are
able to get her to walk up a ramp into a horse-drawn cart with
high sides and lead her through town to the farm owned by
Bobby's grandmother. They name her Beatrice and keep her in
one of the corals on the farm. Then they proceed to build the
raft that will take her to her prince.
Lester is a boat
builder and he and Jo design and build the raft with high
protective sides, barrel pontoons and room for hay. Once this
is complete, Jo and Bobby prepare to tow the raft out to the
island. Although Lester and Eva are concerned parents, Lester
trusts that Jo and Bobby can make the crossing. Unfortunately,
they run aground on some rocks. An unseasonal storm front
moves in and thrusts the children and Beatrice into further
danger. Lester and Eva come to the rescue, but in an attempt
to free Beatrice from the battered raft, Lester almost drowns.
Eva jumps into the stormy sea to save him and Beatrice escapes
the raft to swim on her own. The children are thrown overboard
but manage to swim to shore. Although Jo is unconsolable,
thinking that Beatrice is lost in the storm, the next morning
brings sunshine to the island and a princess to Charlie.
Animal Action:
Animal action is
seen throughout the film and consists of four moose, a dog,
and various background animals such as chickens, a seal, a
porcupine, an eagle, a horse and a goat. The moose actors
include a fully grown male, Charlie, a young moose portraying
Beatrice and a cow with her calf in the final scene.
The most daring
scene in the film occurs when Jo and Bobby are caught in the
storm and must release Beatrice to swim on her own. Lester and
Eva take off into the storm to find their children and the
moose princess. Lester jumps onto the moose raft that is
rocking in the raging waters and tries to unfasten the gate to
free Beatrice. He manages to open the gate, but is thrown from
the raft and knocked out by a pontoon that hits him in the
head. We see Beatrice jump off the raft into the stormy sea
and swim off. As Eva dives in to save Lester, the two children
are thrown overboard by the raging waves. Bobby swims out to
save Jo and sees Beatrice swimming between them. He casts a
line out to Jo and in so doing, it loops around the moose's
neck. Beatrice begins to tow both of them toward the shore,
but the line breaks and she swims off. Jo, Bobby, Eva and
Lester make it to shore, believing that Beatrice is lost in
the storm.
For this extensive
scene, both a real and an animatronic moose were used. When
the moose is seen in the raft as it rocks in the ocean waters,
an animatronic moose was used. After the moose jumps off the
raft we see the legs of the moose under water, kicking as it
swims. This was also an animatronic puppet. For the sequence
where Beatrice dives off the raft and swims away, a controlled
environment was used for filming. The scene was shot in a lake
at the Tralee Veterinary Clinic where horses are trained to
swim. This lake is unique in that the depth of the water can
be regulated and for this scene was kept between three to five
feet deep. The raft was actually tied to a dock and being
shaken by hand with rain machines used to control the storm
weather effect. Moose can naturally swim and dive, and this
particular animal was prepped at the lake for a week prior to
filming. Trainers were in the water with the animal and five
vets were on staff. When the moose is seen towing the
children, a special harness was made to do the towing and a
loose rope was around the neck of the animal for effect.
In the scenes where
we first see Beatrice in the woods eating and then riding in a
horse drawn cart, the moose was filmed in its natural habitat
at Shubenacadie Wildlife Park where it was raised. The moose
playing the princess is actually a one year old male and is
naturally gangly. Trainers worked with the moose for three
months prior to filming and used voice and hand commands. The
scarf placed on the moose's head was a charming headdress for
the princess, but actually served to cover the
"nubs" or newly forming horns of the young male.
Both a real and an animatronic moose were used in the cart.
When the real moose was in the moving wagon, an experienced
trainer was out of camera range, behind the wagon, doing the
actual driving. The children merely appeared to be leading the
wagon.
In one scene,
Beatrice is seen with a playful goat in a coral at Bobby's
grandmother's farm and later escaping from the coral. She is
herded back to the coral by the children in the community and
seen trotting down the center of the road surrounded by two
boys on bikes and followed by a pick up truck.. The goat was
raised with the moose and written into the script so that the
moose would have his constant companion during filming. When
we see the moose appear to open the coral gate, the latch was
rigged with a carrot and actually pulled open by an unseen
line controlled from out of camera range. When the moose is
seen trotting down the road, it was in reality following his
trainer. A trainer was also in the truck behind the moose.
The other scenes in
which we see moose are very mild. Charlie and Beatrice are
seen grazing in a pasture, both alone and together, and seen
also with a baby moose at the end of the film. All these
scenes were filmed in the wildlife park. Other animals such as
a seal swimming, an eagle in a tree and a porcupine up a tree
were also filmed at the wildlife park in their natural
habitat.
Jo has a pet dog in
the film and it is in several scenes either sitting or walking
with her. Background atmosphere included a horse in a coral
and some chickens both in the farmyard and in the hayloft.
This Canadian film
was shot in Canada by a Canadian company. American Humane was
not on the set. However, after conferring with the trainer and
the production company, we are rating Salt Water Moose "
Believed Acceptable."