![]() What we don’t see-just off frame-are the filmmakers pushing the lemmings off the cliff. “A kind of compulsion seizes each tiny rodent and, carried along by an unreasoning hysteria, each falls into step for a march that will take them to a strange destiny.”-narration from White Wilderness. In the film, they show hundreds of lemmings spilling off a cliff into the ocean to drown. ![]() The film stages these lemmings in their march to death. Rumor has it that the Walt Disney company paid a dollar per lemming to Inuit hunters to provide the rodents. The filming of these Norwegian lemmings, for example, was done in Alberta, Canada. The film’s depiction of lemmings, however, was steeped in deception. Released in 1958, the film was part of a series of movies showing “true to life” depictions of animals in their natural environments. ![]() The lemming myth was popularized by none other than the Walt Disney Company in the Academy Award-winning nature documentary, White Wilderness. This idea of lemming behavior has become so prevalent that it’s fallen into popular jargon, where calling someone a lemming means they are unthinking and prone to join mass movements. ![]()
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