.... but it wasn't just three men in the bush filming whatever the day brought, no matter what they said.
Not unless they were using the axe to shave with too.
3 weeks in the bush and not even a 5 o'clock shadow?
I think you can be sure there was a full camp of support staff near.
I don't think they had video cams then, so I bet it was all film with all the lighting and processing crew required for that too.
I think the parts about the bear were real enough, even though setting up a camera and letting her eat the fish seems to me like they were baiting her into camp.
The skills they demonstrated were quite real, but I don't think you could catch many fish like that anymore.
Not because the technique is flawed, there just are not that many fish left.
I can remember catching pike in the spring when they were spawning on flooded meadows and spearing the sucker fish when they ran. That is not effective any more because the runs are much smaller for them now too.
I bet they didn't let the cub get away with the belt either.
I didn't see Mr. Camera's pants falling down as they were loading the canoe.
Our attitudes were different then, and this film was meant to be shown to children as well as adults, so to please the kiddies the bear cub gets to roam free instead of being killed.
A cub on its own is pretty well doomed. It wouldn't likely get to starve though, there are the wolves and bobcats who would enjoy it as a meal.
I suspect it got shipped to a zoo instead, but thats hard to know.
The fire making was real. I just have not seen a fireplow made quite the way he did it.
Also, judging from the number of cuts away and back in that part of the film it took him a lot longer to get it going than they showed. (Likely a LOT longer.)
I intend to try doing it his way once to see how it goes before I judge though.