Box office Grizzly Man opened on August 12, 2005 in 29 North America venues. It grossed US$269,131 ($9,280 per screen) in its opening weekend, ranking number 26 in the box office. At its widest point, it played at 105 theaters, and made US$3,178,403 in North America during its run, with $882,902 overseas for a worldwide total of $4,061,305.
Critical reception Upon its North American theatrical release,
Grizzly Man was acclaimed by critics. On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 93% score based on 144 reviews, with an average rating of 8/10. The site's consensus states: "Whatever opinion you come to have of the obsessive Treadwell, Herzog has once again found a fascinating subject."
Metacritic reports an 87 out of 100 rating based on 35 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
David Denby of
The New Yorker said: Narrating in his extraordinary German-accented English, Herzog is fair-minded and properly respectful of Treadwell's manic self-invention. He even praises Treadwell as a good filmmaker: as Treadwell stands talking in the foreground of the frame, the bears play behind him or scoop up salmon in sparkling water; in other shots, a couple of foxes leap across the grass in the middle of a Treadwell monologue. The footage is full of stunning incidental beauties. Film critic
Roger Ebert, a longtime supporter of Herzog's work, awarded the film four out of four stars. "I will protect these bears with my last breath", Treadwell says. After he and Amie become the first and only people to be killed by bears in the park, the bear that is guilty is shot dead. Treadwell's watch, still ticking, is found on his severed arm. I have a certain admiration for his courage, recklessness, idealism, whatever you want to call it, but here is a man who managed to get himself and his girlfriend eaten, and you know what? He deserves Werner Herzog.
Charlie Russell, a naturalist who studied bears for many years, lived near them and raised them for a decade in
Kamchatka, corresponded with Treadwell and wrote about the film: Herzog is a skillful filmmaker so a large percentage of those who watch the movie
Grizzly Man, overlook Timothy's amazing way with animals even though to me this stands out very strongly. The fact that Timothy spent an incredible 35,000 hours, spanning 13 years, living with the bears in Katmai National Park, without any previous mishap, escapes people completely. Even with his city-kid background, I found myself mesmerized by what he could do with animals. In 2021, it was included on
Forbess list of "The Top 150 Greatest Films Of The 21st Century." In 2023,
Collider called it the "Best Documentary of the 2000s," with Aiden Bryant writing that it is "a testament to the power of true, dedicated documentary filmmaking. It examines a subject beyond just informing the viewer of who, what, when, where, and why - it extrapolates those questions onto us all. It makes a figure like Treadwell, someone who could easily be a martyr or fool, into someone as complicated as any great protagonist in film. Herzog does something in just over 90 minutes that a million
Netflix documentaries never have."
Awards • Nominated for the
Gotham Award for Best Documentary • Won the
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Documentary/ Non-Fiction Film • Won the
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Non-Fiction Film • Won the
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Award for Best Documentary • Won the
Alfred P. Sloan Prize and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 2005
Sundance Film Festival • Won the
Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Documentary • Won the Anugerah Seri Angkasa 2008 Angkasapuri. == References ==