Jonathan of the Bears began production in 1993. In his 2011 book
Any Gun Can Play, Kevin Grant describes it as the last major European Western. The film went into development when
Franco Nero was making a film in Russia and set up a deal to finance a Western between his Muscovite producer and Silvio Berlusconi's Mediaset. Grant felt the film was influenced by
Kevin Costner's film
Dances With Wolves but Nero insists that the film was in preparation before Costner's film was made. Nero went to the United States to seek involvement of
Floyd Red Crow Westerman who was in
Dances With Wolves for the film. Nero also got
Knifewing Segura to sing on the film's soundtrack. The film was shot entirely in Russia. According to a 2002 interview with actor John Saxon, the movie was filmed on a Russian army base that was still operational. The western village that was built there as a set, was made with real timber. The houses even had plumbing and electricity. Saxon explained: "Sometimes we would be shooting and we would hear these noises and it would be drunks sleeping in one of the rooms. See, anybody could come into that base. We walked in and out all the time without anyone checking us." ==Release==