
It’s finally here — time for us to share our incredible Alaskan adventure with the world through Bears of the Last Frontier. It has been quite the journey. The film has been nearly two years in the making, and for both of us it has become an unforgettable part of our lives. Over the course of a year and a half we traveled well over 3000 miles across Alaska and shot 500 hours of footage for this epic three-hour PBS Nature series. We spent many, many months in bear country – piecing together the lives of these fascinating animals by observing and filming them, and by living in bear country, among the animals and people that share bear habitat.
When Joe and I met nearly ten years ago (coincidentally in Alaska) our minds reeled with the possibilities for collaboration. A filmmaker and an ecologist, and a combined dream to have a huge impact for wildlife conservation through the magic of film. The opportunity to work with PBS Nature has been a dream, and has resulted in three beautiful episodes we hope you’ll love.
| Watch a preview: |
We’ve both worked all over the world for the last twenty plus years — Joe as an award-winning wildlife filmmaker, and me as a conservation ecologist. Joe has created dazzling films on an array of epic subjects — from tigers to Asian elephants, and my work has focused on wildlife research and environmental education — mostly about the bears of the world. I’ve also guided hundreds of people on expeditions to see polar bears and grizzly bears. We’ve both witnessed the powerful emotions that these animals can trigger in people, which is why they make such great representatives for conservation, and such great characters in film!
Alaska harbors all three of North America’s bear species, from three hundred pound black bears to polar and brown bears weighing well over half a ton. It is home to the highest mountain on the continent, vast glaciers, immense forests, and a level of isolation that can be found nowhere else in the United States.
And it’s big. This northernmost state is the same size as the next three largest states combined (California, Texas and Montana).
Alaska’s wilderness allowed us to step back in time on a journey that took us through five major ecosystems and the habitats of its three bear species. It was also a journey that put us to the test as we hiked, camped and lived among the biggest bears in the world, chased black bears through the streets of Anchorage, followed grizzlies on the prowl for immense caribou herds, and searched for polar bears miles out on the pack ice. In every one of these locations bears have adapted impressively to their surroundings.
We’re hoping that, as you wander through this website and sink yourself into the series, you will feel immersed in the world of the bear. It is a truly wondrous place.
We also hope that you might be inspired to learn more. Bears represent wildness more than any other species, but we cannot take that wildness for granted — it will take determination, passion, and imagination to ensure that future generations can enjoy a world that includes bear habitat.
Be sure to check out the wonderful organizations listed under resources for ways to learn more. We’re all in this together. And remember — what’s good for bears, is good for people!
We’re so glad you’re along for the adventure!
Chris Morgan, Ecologist
Joe Pontecorvo, Filmmaker



A slight correction: wolverines, not bears, represent wildness more than any other species.
I watched all three installments of this film. It was terrific.
My brother suggested I may like this web site. He was totally right. This post truly made my day. You can not believe just how much time I had spent for this info! Thank you!
God Bless The Adventurer ! My condolences to the Families
Motten ist in einigen Regionen auch der Ausdruck fuer Ziagretten rauchen (wohl weil die wie das Feuer glimmen). Also “ich ga eis ga motte” heisst dann “ich gehe eine Zigarette rauchen”.
good Kharma keeps the wheel turning…
Of course like your net web page but you require to have to check out the spelling on various of your posts. Several of them are rife with spelling troubles and I uncover it seriously bothersome to tell the reality nevertheless I’ll absolutely occur back again after yet again.
F*ckin’ awesome things here. I am very glad to look your article. Thank you so much and i’m having a look forward to touch you. Will you kindly drop me a e-mail?
Great show man. Tried to chat but could not find the link.
excellent ! bears are so amazing animals ! I wonder in the case of polar bears, how fast can they adapt to new situations (like for example, settlements in Svalbard)?
Looks like original chat was May 8th. Here’s the link. http://video.pbs.org/video/1926232408#
Having been up close up and personal with Brown Bear in Alaska, I found the footage interesting. Though I have had these creatures come within 5 feet of me several times (where I had no way to easily move away from them), I have never and will never go anywhere near a mother with cubs. This behavior bordered on total recklessness – take that back, it was totally reckless. No experienced outdoorsman would ever put himself or his mates in such a position.
Another complaint, he never explained the real reason why the females with cubs so avoid males and the danger they present. The real answer is that a male will kill the cubs so that the female will go into heat. An inconvienent truth for sure, but nevertheless the truth that any experienced outdoorsman knows.
This was NOT an eductional film, it was pure BS.
I AM WATCHING PART 1 Right now…. how Beautiful
Beautiful and riveting video, Chris
Brave, bold and informed film makers are you all.
Kudos on your achievement!
i have to agree with Chris P. there is no reason for a human to ever intentionally get that close to a bear, much less a female with cubs!! being a “professional” or a photographer is not an excuse, and in fact makes it that much more shocking that pbs and nature would include that footage without stressing how stupid it is. i felt like i was just watching grizzly man again. maybe you should follow up with that movie.
So, Joe,…..
How much money….
and fame ……
are YOU currently and intrinsically expecting to gain from this exploitation of God’s gift of nature. Your simplistic naievity or maybe just stupidity have utterly amazed me. I must say that your photographers have done an astounding job!
Your narrative has found me gasping in disbelief! You call Prudehoe Bay an industrial wasteland but you fail to give credence to the engineering and skills of man kind which have enabled you to even make your incredible journey in Alaska.
As I’m sure you noticed not once but many times how the wildlife uses with preference the trails ( roads ) created by man. Yet you resoundingly criticize man’s impact
The film was great, But showing Chris and Joe that close to wild bears you are asking for trouble. Viewers will
say that Chris did it and so can I. Putting the viewers and the bear in danger. Show what happens to bears that keep getting to close to humans
Your part 2 really sucked. Watching you drive your motorcycle through Alaska. Really. I watch nature to see nature not you and Joe driving. Part 1 was great and I hope part 3 will be better. Stay safe.
Excellent and exciting! Very informative and I love the part with the grizzly bears!
This is an awesome show.I watched part one already and this one.I will find the second one next and watch it.I really learned a lot more than I knew about polar bears by watching this program.Keep up the good work and thank you!
I’ve been a bit surprised by the comments criticizing Chris for getting so close to the mother bear with cubs. I assume this is the scene with brown bears in Episode 1. (I have not yet seen Episode 3.) Were we watching the same scene? I thought it was pretty apparent that the filmmakers did not intend to be that close but that the mother bear moved toward them. I thought it was also apparent that the filmmakers didn’t WANT to be that close. But once a bear, especially a mother bear with cubs, is getting close, you don’t have the luxury of just getting up and moving away. The act of STANDING UP and BECOMING LARGER could be interpreted as a threat by the bear which could cause an attack that might not otherwise have happened. I assume (hope) that the filmmakers had bear spray that they would have used (only) as a last resort. I think the filmmakers did the right thing by staying low and remaining calm.