Video/DVD Reviews

Video/DVD Reviews -
The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill: Navigation

The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill - G

The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill
Rate It!
On 8+
4 stars

The whole family will fall in love with these brave and beautiful birds.

Rating: G for all audiences Studio: Shadow Distribution Directed By: Judy Irving Running Time: 83 minutes Release Date: 02/08/2005 Genre: Documentary

It's quick and easy to pass on
this great info!

Common Sense Note

Parents need to know that the movie has some very sad moments including the death of some of the birds and a sad parting.

Families who see this movie could talk about how Bittner decided what was important to him and the steps he took to help him deal with change and loss in his life.

Rate It!

Common Sense Review

Reviewed By: Nell Minow

Telegraph Hill, overlooking the North Beach section of San Francisco, is a place where all kinds of creatures from all kinds of places can feel welcome. One of them is onetime musician Mark Bittner, a man with "no visible means of support" who is himself the support for some of the neighborhood's most colorful residents, a flock of bright green wild parrots.

Bittner knows and loves each one of them. He is in one respect a sort of St. Francis of Telegraph Hill, carting huge bags of birdseed home on the bus to feed to them and taking the sick ones into his home to nurse them. But he is also their Jane Goodall, possibly the only person in history to study a group of parrots so intently over so long a period.

Bittner does not have a job, at least not one that pays him anything. He lives rent-free in a crumbling cottage and gets free pastries from a local cafe. The birds are his full-time job. He studies them, reads up on them, consults the bird specialist at the local zoo, and develops his own treatments, even grooming one parrot when he no longer has a mate to do it for him.

Through Bittner, even the least animal-friendly viewer will begin to fall in love with these brave and beautiful birds. His passion, dedication, and understanding are first impressive, then touching, then transcendent as he begins to talk about the death of a beloved parrot named Tupelo and tells a story from a zen master about the way we are all connected. The movie concludes with a moment of breathtaking perfection with the sweetest connection of all.

Families who enjoy this movie may also enjoy Winged Migration.

Rate It! Send to a Friend

It's quick and easy to pass on
this great info!

Content
CS adults kids

Sexual Content

Violence

Sad deaths (offscreen).

Language

Message

 

Social Behavior

 

Commercialism

 

Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco

Rate It Now

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

OR

Tell others what you think!
Write a review or post a comment.

It only takes a minute to get great benefits! Sign up now and get a FREE Internet Survival Guide!