>>218158>On the other he oversteps the invisible boundary that Herzog describes. His relationship with the foxes seems cute, but in reality its unethical. If he loves the foxes, he should let them be wild and free.Agreed, more or less. Was the fox any less "wild" because of Treadwell? You could argue that one in either direction I'd say.
In any action we take we are interacting with nature, and it with us. This is inescapable, but yeah, perhaps Treadwell pushed it too far with the foxes. That's interesting though when you think about human history as it relates to canines. You can see how a fox like that could eventually come to form a lineage of dogs that mesh well with human life.
Also by Herzog, and definitely up the alley of the board is "Happy People: A year in the Taiga". It's different from Grizzly Man, but an interesting film all the same. It follows trappers living deep in Sibera for a full year - very cool to even just see them work.
trailer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1pOjj49d9Y