Cannes Film Festival 2013

Thanks to 'War Horse' and 'We Bought a Zoo,' it's high times for Dartmoor

Two holiday films draw ties to South England's protected moorland

<p>Jeremy Irvine in Steven Spielberg's "War Horse"</p>

Jeremy Irvine in Steven Spielberg's "War Horse"

Credit: Touchstone Pictures

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A reader comment in last week's "War Horseassessment sparked me to an element of this year's Oscar season that I hadn't even noticed: Dartmoor's time in the spotlight.

The Dartmoor moorland in South Devon County, England is a protected National Park known for its tors, rivers and bogs (yep, I'm skipping a stone across the Wikipedia entry). It's notable this year, though, because two of the upcoming holiday season's crowd-pleasing, sentimental entries share ties to the location.

Cameron Crowe's "We Bought a Zoo" was adapted from the memoir by Benjamin Mee, who purchased the Dartmoor Wildlife Park (now called the Dartmoor Zoological Park) and set up shop with his family. The film was shifted to a San Diego County location, however.

Crowe did tell me, however, that he and production designer Clay Griffith "studied every frame" of the BBC documentary "Ben's Zoo" throughout production. When Mee saw the finished product, he told Crowe, "It looks just like Dartmoor."

Crowe says he's looking forward to visiting the zoo for the first time in the next few months.

Steven Spielberg's "War Horse," meanwhile, actually filmed under the codename "Dartmoor" and set up production in the Dartmoor countryside for a number of weeks. Much of the landscape is captured gorgeously by cinematographer Janusz Kaminski, and indeed, the film's opening visuals are a brief love letter to the scenery.

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Quoted in The Telegraph newspaper way back in October of 2010, Spielberg confessed, "I have never before, in my long and eclectic career, been gifted with such an abundance of natural beauty as I experienced filming 'War Horse' on Dartmoor. And with two-and-a-half weeks of extensive coverage of landscapes and skies, I hardly scratched the surface of the visual opportunities that were offered to me."

This afternoon, Spielberg participated in an MSN-sponsored live stream Q&A and spoke about the connection to John Ford cinema some have made about "War Horse." It's notable because of what that connection reveals about Spielberg's perspective on his locations in the new film.

"Ford's in my mind when I make a lot of my pictures," Spielberg admitted. "I think the thing that might resemble a John Ford movie more than anything else is that Ford...celebrated the land." And in "War Horse," he said, the landscape is very much a character.

"All I know is that the Devon Tourist Board must be rubbing their hands in glee at this," In Contention reader Peter Pedant wrote in response to my "War Horse" piece over the weekend. "It's such beautiful countryside and I can see the tourism boom there is going to go on for a long time."

Maybe it will indeed get a spurt of interest, and that never hurts. As a huge National Park hound myself (I've been to many throughout the U.S. and consider that kind of spirit important and vital), I certainly hope the area gets an uptick in visibility.

I feel more and more strongly about this kind as the years go on, I notice.

Keep up with what's going on at the Dartmoor Zoological Park via its website and Twitter feed. Learn more about the Dartmoor moorland, meanwhile, at the official National Park site.

For year-round entertainment news and awards season commentary follow @kristapley on Twitter.

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Kristopher-tapley-sm
Kristopher Tapley
Editor-at-Large
Kristopher Tapley has covered the film awards landscape for over a decade. He founded In Contention in 2005. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Times of London and Variety. He begs you not to take any of this too seriously.

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    Peter Pedant

    Cheers for that Kris. Tell Cameron he should visit in late May, when Dartmoor is at its most lush.

    By the way, if you or your readers are interested in seeing more of Dartmoor, there was a fantastic BBC documentary called Edwardian Farm that aired on BBC earlier this year. In it, three historians lived for a year as Edwardian farmers (dur) on a farm by the Tamar River just to the east of Dartmoor. They tried their hand at all sorts of 100-year old rural activities (cheese-making, fishing, mining, lime-making, taming the wild Dartmoor ponies and so on), as well as running the farm, and the very last episode was of interest at Michael Morpurgo came to talk about how World War I was the death-knell for this kind of life, as so many men and horses went off to war, never to come back. That, together with the coming of mechanised farming, meant that rural England would never be the same. I think that segment of the Edwardian Farm series was filmed at the same time that War Horse was being filmed only a few miles away; as with the rest of the people involved in the series, Morpurgo was in period costume, and I like to think maybe it was the outfit he wore for his cameo in the film.

    December 2, 2011 at 5:31AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Peter Pedant

    Whoops, I mean the River Tamar is just to the west of Dartmoor, on the Devon/Cornwall border. The site they filmed at, Morwellham Quay, is on the Devon side of the river. The countryside is gurt lush, as they say down there.

    December 2, 2011 at 5:35AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Peter Pedant

    Here it is: 6:01 onwards is about WW1 and Morpurgo's contribution

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nkae5F7iF4g&feature=related

    December 2, 2011 at 5:40AM EST Reply to Comment

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