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Helen and the Bear Review: Treasured Visions of Relationship

Beyond Surface Views of Partnership

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
11 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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Alix Blair sets out to document her aunt and uncle’s storied relationship. Helen McCloskey and her husband Pete had been together for nearly four decades, enduring the highs and lows that come with long-term commitment. As their niece, Alix had known them from a young age and admired their close bond. She saw in them something inspiring that she hoped to share.

When Alix decided to make a film about her family, she intended to focus on Pete’s diverse career—he was a pioneering politician who spoke out early on issues like Vietnam and Watergate. But as she listened to Helen and Pete reflect on their past together, Alix became fascinated by the intricacies of their marriage. She realized their story had much to teach about navigating life’s challenges through mutual care, understanding, and support.

Using diaries from Helen’s youth, snapshots from across the decades, and candid conversations in their later years, Alix gains new insight into the hurdles they overcame. We learn of the growing pains Helen experienced in embracing her identity within the constraints of her time. We witness how Pete’s dedication to causes shaped and strained their dynamic. Yet through these turning points, their love endured.

Filming at a moment of transition as Pete’s health declines, Alix captures the tender balance of dependence and independence in their dynamic. Her respectful lens honors the fullness of their bond, from joyous road trips to solemn discussions of life’s end. Thanks to Alix’s perceptive focus, Helen and Pete’s tale brings hope that commitment, through openness and perseverance, can still blossom beautifully even late in life.

Reflections of Radiant Souls

At its heart, Helen and the Bear share an intimate portrait of two free spirits who found solace in one another. Helen came from modest means but possessed a curiosity that led her down unfamiliar paths. As a child, she showed flashes of independence and was uncomfortable conforming to expectations placed on girls. This spark never faded, inspiring Helen’s advocacy for civil rights.

Helen and the Bear Review

She came to know Pete during turbulent times as he fought injustice through politics. A decorated veteran, Pete wished no reward greater than service to others. Yet even heroes need an equal to soothe restless souls. In Helen, Pete found more than a partner—a bright light guiding his own evolution. Where many dismissed Pete’s bold reforms, Helen supported transformations ahead of their time.

Their bond grew through shared passions too, namely reverence for the natural world. On wooded trails or soaking in hot springs, Helen and Pete discovered respite from strife. In each other’s company, the frantic pace of change slowed into a quiet wonder at life’s simplicities. Through it all, their bond endured differences, testing lesser relationships.

Helen embraced aspects of herself once silenced, though never at the cost of her commitment to Pete. Her autonomy strengthened their interdependence. Now in retirement, they reflect on struggles through a compassionate lens, aware that life’s final chapters can be its most beautiful. As sunset falls each day, Helen and Pete find solace not in what was but in each moment shared, affirmed in a love spanning generations.

Theirs is a story to inspire all who’ve known life’s difficulties but faced them hand in hand with a kindred soul. Though seasons change and health fails, true hearts remain.

Navigating life’s currents together

The documentary provides intimate insights into Helen and Pete’s relationship dynamics over decades. While both shared a passion for environmental advocacy, clashes in perspective came from Pete’s all-consuming political career.

Helen and the Bear Review

We see its strain through Helen’s diaries. Despite marrying her best friend, she felt unfree within the marriage’s confines. Pete focused on campaigns, while Helen suppressed her identity. She yearned for autonomy outside of family and public life.

With time, resentments grew as Pete took Helen for granted. He seemed unaware of how fully leaning on her crushed her spirit. His shadow loomed large, as with past partners. While Pete loved without restraint, that love sometimes eroded others completely.

Helen faced loneliness within crowds and a lack of a lack of companionship. Her journal expressed stifled dreams as responsibilities replaced personal fulfillment. Seeking solace in queer relationships, she felt Pete reduced her to his “gay wife.”

These dynamics testing others’ love proved insufficient to break their bond. They had difficulties strengthening intimacy. Helen embraced repressed parts of herself without abandoning commitment. Love endured through mutual growth.

Their relationship prevailed when rigid roles were dissolved. Helen gained independence, strengthening interdependence. Forgiveness exceeded expectations as they accepted life’s complexities. Even amid difficulties, compassion defined their lens on struggles weathered together over decades.

While some partnerships falter under such pressures, this special type of love endures. At their hearts, Helen and Pete remain dedicated to each other and to living fully as themselves, side by side.

Riding the Wave of Change

This film transports us back to the turbulent 1970s. Helen and Pete lived through an era defined by unrest—one that drove them both to action.

Red Fever

Pete emerged as an unlikely rebel within American politics. A Republican turned Democrat, he boldly opposed the consensus where others would not. Pete sued the Pentagon over the Vietnam War and called for Nixon’s impeachment, earning ire from his own party.

Yet these acts came from Pete’s unyielding commitment to principles. He saw war as wrong and corruption as intolerable. Though controversial, his stand reflected core values regardless of politics.

At the same time, Helen discovered her own voice. As a young woman coming of age, she embraced causes close to her heart. The 1970s awakened a sense of a sense of self-awareness and a drive for change.

Helen joined Pete on environmental crusades, from saving endangered wildlife to protecting open spaces. She found purpose in guiding legislation, embracing the freedoms emerging for women and queer communities. No longer would others define her path.

Together, Helen and Pete rode waves of change within their era. They brought people together for progress, pushing acceptance through compassionate disagreement. While others reacted in extremes, this couple brought nuance, focusing on the common good.

Their bond proved steadfast as movements divided friends. Where relationships faltered under pressure, theirs endured through understanding each other’s commitment to greater justice. United in devotion, their love transcended surface politics.

Helen and Pete’s story reflects how conviction strengthens through partnership. Facing upheaval, their response brought people together. Even now, their example holds clues for navigating an ever-changing world with care, wisdom, and heart.

Treasured Moments Portrayed

Alix Blair crafts Helen and the Bear with meticulous care, bringing intimacy to universal themes. Her direction infuses routines with deep meaning, capturing life’s profound moments within everyday scenes.

Blair draws from rich source material to flesh out characters beyond brief encounters. The diaries offer a first-hand lens into Helen’s evolving identity, revealing both joys and struggles over decades. Archival clips place present conversations in historical context.

Through these personal records, subtle shifts emerge. Changes in Helen’s handwriting portray an ongoing journey, while footage shows political eras that shaped Pete. Layering these details brings subjects to life as complex individuals, not just roles within marriage.

Careful cinematography elevates ordinary moments. Scenes during magic hour glow with transcendent beauty, like a parting embrace as light fades. Even discomfort grows poignant. Helen’s grieving roadkill evokes our frailty before nature’s cycles.

Music further enhances bittersweet scenes. An achingly lovely score flows bittersweetly during hardships like saying goodbye to beloved pets. Songs hold deeper beauty from characters’ perspectives too, from protest anthems to psychedelic trips reflecting their spirit.

While unraveling one relationship’s nuances, Blair’s film holds profound mirrors. It questions what truly sustains difficult love and how growth occurs through facing truths. Moments where Helen asserts independence or Pete supports causes greater than himself suggest what nurtures devotion despite disagreements.

Most deeply, it celebrates embracing life’s brevity. As mortality looms larger, Helen and Pete find solace in living fully while they can. Facing finitude with curiosity, compassion, and delight for each day lived, they demonstrate how consciously appreciating our limited time can deepen every lasting connection.

In intimate stills and sweeping vistas, Helen and the Bear pay tribute to treasuring fleeting moments and finding abundant joy even within loss, as only those who have loved deeply can.

Treasured Relationships on Display

Audiences have deeply responded to Helen and the Bear’s thoughtful depiction of aging and its impacts on long-term couples. The film handles sensitive topics with candid care, portraying the challenges of caregiving as Pete’s health declines.

Yet Alix Blair’s direction overwhelmingly focuses on the profound love still shining through decades later. Scenes showing their warm affection, even in sorrow, strike viewers with the resilience of companionship. Whether laughing together or grieving loss, Helen and Pete demonstrate love’s ability to weather all hardships.

Their bond’s unconventional aspects, from Helen’s queerness to periods apart, seem only to strengthen viewers’ views of love taking myriad forms. Far from dissidence, these differences exhibit commitment through life’s changes—an inspiring message for all partnerships.

While grappling with mortality’s weight, the film celebrates fully embracing each moment. Helen and Pete live through curiosity, community, adventure, and delight in nature, revealing what truly enriches life’s later years. Their passion for affirming life’s brevity has moved viewers to consider their own connections and priorities.

Reception affirms that the film captures spiritual qualities often lacking in depictions of aging. Where stereotypes show merely frailty, Helen and Pete demonstrate mortality paired with enduring joy, compassion, and youth of spirit. Their treasured relationship, in all its complexity, serves as an affectionate guide for all seeking to love without limits.

Treasured Visions of Relationships

Helen and the Bear invite us beyond surface views of partnership. Director Alix Blair presents a moving portrait of her aunt and uncle embracing life’s richness through compassion.

Many assume love between elders involves quiet resignation. Yet Helen and Pete demonstrate lust for adventure even in fragility. While caregiving strains Helen, their playfulness sustains hope through hardship. Against aging alone, their bond encourages the community’s strength.

Blair challenges beliefs reducing sexuality’s place as time’s companion. Intimacy need not fade; relationships evolve on journeys shared. Helen’s queerness and periods apart seem only opportunities for understanding the deeper truths of the human heart.

We see how identity and desire differ from societal confines. Compromise strengthens ties by accepting life’s complexity, not suppressing our truths. Pete supports Helen’s freedom, though convention splits them; their loyalty transcends surface risks to trust in love’s ability to hold all parts together.

This film celebrates finding wholeness through another’s understanding. By capturing life’s bittersweet passages with care, Blair reflects a vision where commitment nurtures constant discovery of self and partnership’s marvels, not resignation before uncertainty. May their treasured visions inspire our own.

The Review

Helen and the Bear

9 Score

Compassionately capturing the profound commitments between its subjects, Helen and the Bear presents an inspiring vision of a relationship capable of embracing life's ceaseless changes with grace. Blair's documentary teaches profound lessons of unwavering support through understanding another's journey, whatever form it takes. This film is a treasured portrait of heroes who show intimacy's power to cultivate discovery and joy in even darkness's company.

PROS

  • Authentic and emotionally powerful storytelling that feels deeply human
  • Challenges assumptions about relationships, sexuality, and aging in an enlightening way
  • It evokes contemplation on identity, compromise, and the resilience of commitment
  • Features compelling and charismatic subjects in Helen and Pete McCloskey
  • Director Alix Blair brings care, insight, and artistic vision to capturing her subjects

CONS

  • May trigger feelings of grief or loneliness for some viewers facing their own mortality
  • Pete and Helen's experience will not resonate universally and may seem unconventional to some
  • At nearly two hours, the film's length could test the endurance of some viewers

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Alix BlairDocumentaryHelen and the BearKatrina Taylor
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