Never Cry Wolf
Brief Synopsis
A government researcher fights to survive when he's marooned in the Canadian wilderness.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Carroll Ballard
Director
Charles Martin Smith
Brian Dennehy
Zachary Ittimangnaq
Samson Jorah
Hugh Webster
Film Details
Also Known As
homme parmi les loups
MPAA Rating
Genre
Adventure
Drama
Release Date
1983
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 45m
Synopsis
A government researcher fights to survive when he's marooned in the Canadian wilderness.
Director
Carroll Ballard
Director
Cast
Charles Martin Smith
Brian Dennehy
Zachary Ittimangnaq
Samson Jorah
Hugh Webster
Mark Isham
Performer
Tom Dahlgren
Walker Stuart
Martha Ittimangnaq
C M Smith
Narrator
Crew
Mark Adler
Music Producer
Mark Adler
Music Arranger
Lewis M Allen
Producer
Patti Allen
Production Coordinator
Kenneth Beebe
Animal Trainer
Sieuwke Bisletti
Animal Trainer
Todd Boekelheide
Music Supervisor
Todd Boekelheide
Music Producer
Fitch Cady
Unit Manager
Bayard Carey
Production Assistant
Michael Chandler
Editor
Debbie Coe
Animal Trainer
Anthony Cookson
Assistant Director
Eugene Corr
Other
Jack Couffer
Producer
Carrie Deruiter
Main Title Design
Karen Dew
Animal Trainer
Teresa Ekton
Sound Editor
Rob Fruchtman
Sound Editor
Gary Gero
Animal Trainer
Al Giddings
Photography
Sam Hamm
Screenplay
Curtis Hanson
Screenplay
Mark Hardin
Animal Trainer
Lamme Hemphill
Production Assistant
Madeline Holmes
Animal Trainer
John Houston
Assistant Director
Robert Hughes
Music
Mark Isham
Music Arranger
Mark Isham
Music
Trish Keating
Costumes
Gary Kenwood
Animal Trainer
Colin Michael Kitchens
Assistant Director
Richard Kletter
Screenplay
Gabriel Kruks
Key Grip
Claudette Laurencelle
Production Coordinator
Donna Loptsom
Animal Trainer
Harry Lowry
Other
Christina Luescher
Other
Scott Maitland
Assistant Director
Paul Marbury
Camera Operator
Peter Matthiessen
Consultant
H J Mccullough
Animal Trainer
Wayne Mclaughlin
Props
Ron Miller
Executive Producer
William Mizel
Production Assistant
Farley Mowat
Book As Source Material
Wanda Mull
Production Manager
Graeme Murray
Art Director
Hiro Narita
Director Of Photography
Peter Parasheles
Editor
Barbara Parker
Script Supervisor
David Parker
Sound
Kelley Pratt
Animal Trainer
Patty Proudfoot
Production Assistant
Ronald Raffler
Animal Trainer
Michael Rosenthal
Assistant Editor
Deborah Scott
Costume Designer
Cheryl Shawver
Animal Trainer
Robert Shoup
Sound Editor
Jennifer Shull
Casting
William Shumow
Art Department
C M Smith
Other
Alan Splet
Sound
Lane Starling
Production Assistant
Jenny Stein
Assistant Editor
Robert Steinbrecher
Production Manager
Joseph Strick
Producer
Walker Stuart
Associate Producer
Grant Swain
Props
Daniel Swanstrom
Other
Jules Sylvester
Animal Trainer
Randy Thom
Sound
John Thomas
Special Effects
John Wardlow
Stunt Coordinator
John Wardlow
Stunt Man
Douglas J White
Production
Richard Wilcox
Art Department
John Wright
Art Department
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Also Known As
homme parmi les loups
MPAA Rating
Genre
Adventure
Drama
Release Date
1983
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 45m
Award Nominations
Best Sound
1983
Articles
Never Cry Wolf
Ballard and his dedicated crew spent many difficult months in the Alaskan wilderness shooting the story of a studious research scientist (Charles Martin Smith) who finds himself in the adventure of his life when he agrees to record the impact wolf packs have on caribou that roam the frozen tundra.
Smith plays Tyler, a somewhat fictionalized version of Farley Mowat, a real-life naturalist who wrote the book that Never Cry Wolf is based on. Tyler has been sent to determine whether wolves are decimating the caribou population, but starts having second thoughts about the job during a perilous plane trip to his destination. The plane's pilot (Brian Dennehy) is forced to climb out on the wing in mid-flight to fix a broken engine, while Tyler holds the controls steady. A great deal of the film's kick comes from the incongruity of the especially nerdish Smith having to behave heroically.
During his stay in the wild, Tyler befriends an aging Inuit Indian named Ootek (Zachary Ittimangnaq), and the man's adopted son, Mike (Samson Jorah.) But the most compelling relationship in the picture is certainly the one that develops between Tyler and the wolves, who turn out to be far less damaging to the caribou than he was led to believe.
Never Cry Wolf in the vicinity of Nome, Alaska, where it's so cold the ground is frozen solid to depths of almost 200 feet! Throughout shooting, he realized that the most significant scene in the film the image that would sell the picture to audiences would be a caribou stampede that Tyler finds himself in the middle of after falling asleep and stumbling naked out of his tent.
This small detail made an already extraordinarily difficult scene all the harder to take for poor Charles Martin Smith, who had to repeatedly strip down and pursue a pack of animals that could have easily trampled him to death. It was a whole lot easier when Smith just had to park a moped in front of a hamburger joint while playing "Terry the Toad" in American Graffiti (1973). However, Smith reportedly met Ballard's challenge with something approaching good humor.
"We had to do the scene outside of Nome," Ballard told Rolling Stone writer Tim Cahill at the time of the picture's release. "In no other place in the world except maybe Siberia, could you get the caribou in a place where you could control them."
Well, theoretically, anyway. Ballard quickly learned that anything having to do with caribou was easier said than done. For one thing, he had to film the animals before they were brought down by local hunters who sell their ground horns as an aphrodisiac in Japan, where an ounce of the stuff cost as much as an ounce of cocaine. Simply getting the caribou to stay in one place was almost impossible. At one point, after the people of Nome gathered and fenced in 4,000 of the animals, the entire herd swam away under the cover of fog! Planes eventually found the creatures spread over 50 miles of land.
After that disastrous false start, Ballard, and Smith in all his naked glory, managed to film a very memorable sequence. "The studio had already spent ten times more than anyone in his right mind would on such a scene," Ballard told Cahill. "So we talked about mechanical caribou, electronic caribou, caribou made out of clay, animated caribou, men running around in caribou suits. We thought about finding the biggest caribou herd we could find and parachuting everyone right into the middle of it."
In the end, Ballard and the crew had to return the following year to the peninsula where the previous herd of caribou managed to escape. The six minutes of footage that appears in the finished film of Never Cry Wolf came to define the picture in most people's minds, as Ballard suspected, and used up a full one-third of the budget.
Director: Carroll Ballard
Producer: Lewis Allen, Jack Couffer, Joseph Strick
Screenplay: Curtis Hanson, Sam Hamm, Richard Kletter (based on the book by Farley Mowat)
Editor: Peter Parasheles, Michael Chandler
Cinematographer: Hiro Narita
Music: Mark Isham
Art Direction: Graeme Murray Cast: Charles Martin Smith (Tyler), Brian Dennehy (Rosie), Zachary Ittimangnaq (Ootek), Samson Jorah (Mike), Martha Ittimangnaq (Ootek's Wife).
C-105m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Paul Tatara
Never Cry Wolf
Carroll Ballard, who began his movie career as a documentarian, arrived with a splash when his first narrative feature, The Black Stallion (1979), turned out to be one of the most gorgeously photographed pictures in motion picture history. It should come as no surprise then that Ballard's follow-up Never Cry Wolf (1983) is equally memorable for its stunning imagery, though it is also unique for its quirky character development and offbeat sense of humor.
Ballard and his dedicated crew spent many difficult months in the Alaskan wilderness shooting the story of a studious research scientist (Charles Martin Smith) who finds himself in the adventure of his life when he agrees to record the impact wolf packs have on caribou that roam the frozen tundra.
Smith plays Tyler, a somewhat fictionalized version of Farley Mowat, a real-life naturalist who wrote the book that Never Cry Wolf is based on. Tyler has been sent to determine whether wolves are decimating the caribou population, but starts having second thoughts about the job during a perilous plane trip to his destination. The plane's pilot (Brian Dennehy) is forced to climb out on the wing in mid-flight to fix a broken engine, while Tyler holds the controls steady. A great deal of the film's kick comes from the incongruity of the especially nerdish Smith having to behave heroically.
During his stay in the wild, Tyler befriends an aging Inuit Indian named Ootek (Zachary Ittimangnaq), and the man's adopted son, Mike (Samson Jorah.) But the most compelling relationship in the picture is certainly the one that develops between Tyler and the wolves, who turn out to be far less damaging to the caribou than he was led to believe.
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall October 1, 1983
Released in United States Fall October 1, 1983