• Don't Buy a Ticket to 'We Bought a Zoo'

    Written by Jennifer OConnor


    © Zebra: deste / sxc.hu | Ribbon: Elize / sxc.hu

    Fading director Cameron Crowe is using wild animals as "actors." In his new movie, We Bought a Zoo, he used lions, bears, and other wild animals who are at great risk for abuse because of their strength and instinctive aggression.

    PETA repeatedly reached out to Crowe and Fox Studios before and during production and warned them about how wild animals used for films are often subjected to food deprivation, beatings, and jolts with electric-shock devices during pre-production training and urged them to use high-tech computer-generated imagery instead, like that used in the blockbuster Rise of the Planet of the Apes.

    Animals rented out for use in movies aren't often abused on the set—that usually takes place when no one is around to see it. PETA undercover investigations at wild-animal training facilities documented that lions and tigers were repeatedly beaten and psychologically abused by trainers intent on showing them "who's boss." When animals grow too old or too large to be controlled, they often spend the rest of their lives at decrepit roadside zoos or backyard menageries.

    Please skip this movie and tweet that animals belong in the wild, not on the big screen, @WeBoughtAZoo.

  • Cameron Crowe Should Fire Ape Actors

    Written by PETA

    Experts are calling on director Cameron Crowe to stop using primates as props in his films, like his upcoming We Bought a Zoo:

     

    • World-renowned primatologist Dr. Shirley McGreal, chairperson of the International Primate Protection League, has written to Crowe asking him to leave primates out of the picture, saying, "Capuchin monkeys belong in the rain-forests of South America, not in Hollywood studios."
    • Kari Bagnall, director of Jungle Friends Primate Sanctuary, asked Crowe to consider "the horror both mother and baby must feel" when they are forcibly separated so that the babies can "get used to" human contact.
    • Born Free USA's executive vice president, Adam Roberts, told Crowe that using primates in movies "helps support a false assumption that capuchins are not endangered and that wild populations do not require our attention in order to survive."
    • Primatologist Bob Ingersoll, president of Mindy's Memory Primate Sanctuary as well as the central figure in the new documentary Project Nim, pointed out that "computer-generated imaging has made using live animals entirely unnecessary and hopefully soon obsolete."
    • The North American Primate Sanctuary Alliance, a coalition of primate experts, unanimously agreed that Crowe should stop using these animals in films.

    If you see an animal in a movie, commercial, or print advertisement, please let us know info@peta.org so that we can take action.

     

    Written by Jennifer O'Connor

REPORT CRUELTY

If you have a general question for PETA and would like a response, please e-mail Info@peta.org. If you need to report cruelty to an animal, please click here. If you are reporting an animal in imminent danger and know where to find the animal and if the abuse is taking place right now, please call your local police department. If the police are unresponsive, please call PETA immediately at 757-622-7382 and press 2. 

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