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Orangutans to Watch Film 'Born to be Wild'
February 21, 2012

(ANTARA/Widodo S. Jusuf) (ANTARA/Widodo S. Jusuf)
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Jakarta. A film about one woman's efforts to rescue orangutans and return them to Indonesia's rapidly disappearing jungles has made its way home.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said "Born to be Wild 3D" tugged at his heart. He hopes it will inspire his countrymen to work harder to save the red apes from extinction.

Producer Drew Fellman said a special viewing will be held on the island of Borneo, where much of the film is set, so the orangutans can get a peak for themselves.

He's setting up a screen in the rain forest to see if they'll pay attention.

It's also his way of saying thank you.

"They worked pretty hard on it," Fellman said Tuesday as he headed to the site. "They came to be like members of the crew."
The 40-minute Warner Bros. and IMAX documentary, narrated by Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, follows two women and the animal orphanages they built on opposite sides of the globe.

Daphne M. Sheldrick has spent a lifetime in Kenya caring for elephants whose mothers were poached for their tusks.
Canadian Birute Mary Galdikas, who arrived in Indonesia in the 1970s, has more than 300 young orangutans at her care center just outside Tanjung Puting National Park.

Many of their mothers were killed when they strayed into agricultural plantations in search of food. Others have been hunted by villagers as pests or, occasionally, for their meat.

Galdikas is glad the movie, which wowed audiences last year in the United States, finally made its way here.

"It helps raise awareness," said the 65-year-old primatologist. "The average person in Indonesia still doesn't yet understand the orangutan is a close relative and that they are a protected species and on the verge of extinction."

Indonesia — home to 90 percent of the orangutans left in the wild — has lost half of its rain forests in the last half century in its rush to supply the world with timber, pulp, paper and, more recently, palm oil.

The remaining 50,000 to 60,000 live in scattered, degraded forests, putting them in frequent, and often deadly, conflict with humans.

http://www.Imax.com/borntobewild

 Associated Press




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    tell that to the journalist that just got stabbed by the government minister. The US needs to hurry up and sell these apes some artillery so they c
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    Good one, i believe it's the first country in the region(S.E.Asia) doing so, beside Australia and kiwi.
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