Big Miracle
Big Miracle is a 2012 British-American drama film directed by Ken Kwapis, and stars Drew Barrymore and John Krasinski. The film is based on Tom Rose's 1989 book Freeing the Whales, which covers Operation Breakthrough, the 1988 international effort to rescue gray whales trapped in ice near Point Barrow, Alaska.
Plot
Adam Carlson, a news reporter in Point Barrow, a small town in northern Alaska, can’t wait to land a job in a bigger market in the lower 48 states. Then, in October 1988, the story of a lifetime practically gets dropped into his lap: while befriending local Inupiat boy Nathan, a family of gray whales is discovered by them near the Arctic Circle, trapped by rapidly forming ice. Along with the descending media, including kindred spirit Jill Jerard, comes his ex-girlfriend Rachel Kramer – a Greenpeace volunteer, and Pat Lafayette, an Arctic Wildlife Refuge expert. Adam names the adult whales Fred and Wilma, and the infant Bamm-Bamm, and Rachel agrees to help Adam start a rescue campaign for the trapped whale family.Having been informed by Pat the whale family is trapped five miles inland, they realize they need icebreaker equipment to perform a successful rescue. Ruth McGraw, a secret Greenpeace activist, anonymously tips Rachel off that her husband Alaskan Northern Oil executive J.W. McGraw owns a hover barge that can pulverize a path through the ice. Having had a public and televised confrontation over bidding rights to the oil in Bristol Bay, Rachel and McGraw are all but at each other’s throats. But after being slyly informed by his wife how he would look if he became a tree hugger like Rachel, McGraw agrees to let “the witch” borrow his hover barge, and even agrees to pay for the fuel.
Rachel has to resort to a potential PR scandal to prompt hard-hearted local Governor Haskell into joining the good-will effort, but Sarah Palin and the Joint Chiefs Of Staff need no such prompting. And once McGraw meets the whale family, he becomes fully committed as well, whereas before he was simply interested in securing a drilling contract. The National Guard - including Col. Scott Boyer, SAR Pilot Conrad, his copilot and General Stanton - are mobilized to begin the process of transporting the hover barge. Meanwhile, White House Representative Kelly Meyers, realizes what good PR the whale rescue would be for the administration, and gets the American president Ronald Regan involved in the effort. Being his representative, Kelly heads for Alaska, where she and Scott meet.
While the hover barge is beginning its journey, however, the whales are running out of time, not only because their breathing hole is steadily growing smaller, but also because the local Inupiat whale hunting captains are considering harvesting them for food because they haven’t filled their quota, even though they don’t normally eat gray whales and traditionally hunt bowhead whales, which are capable of punching through the ice, whereas Fred, Wilma, and Bamm-Bamm are not. Having been warned through advice by Adam, the Inupiat leader and elder, Malik - who is Nathan’s grandfather - persuades them to instead volunteer keeping the breathing hole open by using chainsaws.
Malik, a spiritual man in tune with nature, becomes aware that something is wrong with baby Bamm-Bamm, and Pat agrees with his assessment, diagnosing the calf as having come down with pneumonia because of the severe cold. Without hesitation, Rachel dons a special diving suit and goes into the water to examine Bamm-Bamm up close. It’s implied by Adam while he’s trying to stop her that her always-driving-forward attitude was why they broke up. Under the icy water, she finds a gill net wrapped around Bamm-Bamm’s fluke, and immediately cuts it off him, and he seems to perk up quite a bit after being freed. But he’s still sick, and needs his mother and father to help him get to the surface to breathe.
Meanwhile, disaster strikes as the hover barge runs into an Arctic pothole even larger than the barge, and becomes no longer viable as an option to rescue the whale family. Scott is refusing to give up, however, and asks Kelly if the White House has a backup plan, to which she replies she was hoping he had one for them. Not only that, the ice is spreading faster than the volunteers can keep it back. But just as time is about to run out, two entrepreneurs from Minnesota, Dean Glowacki and Karl Hootkin, provide de-icing machines that help keep the hole open and buy the three whales much-needed time. However, not only does the initial problem of cutting a five-mile path through half a foot of ice remain, at the place where the whales are supposed to go, scouts discover an additional problem of huge proportions: a thick wall of ice known as a pressure ridge that goes all the way to the sea floor and grows thicker with each passing hour.
The several normally hostile factions - Inupiat, Greenpeace, the National Guard, the White House, and Alaskan Northern Oil - eventually learn respect and understanding from each other as they try to save the gray whales. So when it’s suggested to approach the Soviet Union - the only other ones who have an icebreaker barge nearby - for help, the initial response is an almost unanimous “NO WAY!” But much as they don’t want to admit it, they acknowledge they do need the Soviet Union’s help. So Captain Yuri Nikolvich and his First Mate Dimitri are dispatched by Mikhail Gorbachev to aid in the rescue, officially making this an international effort. In anticipation of their arrival, breathing holes are cut every sixty feet all the way to the pressure ridge. Before the icebreaker ship arrives, however, little Bamm-Bamm succumbs to his illness and dies. Only then do Fred and Wilma swim to the pressure ridge. And everyone on both sides of the ocean are genuinely saddened by Bamm-Bamm’s death, and become determined to save Fred and Wilma, no matter what it takes.
The enormous Soviet ice-breaker ship arrives to remove the last barrier before the whales die. The ship's first attempt doesn't work and leaves only a dent. The second attempt frightens the whales and they start swimming back the way they came, but the other breathing holes have frozen over and they’re running out of air. Risking their lives and their ship, the Soviets charge full-speed at the pressure ridge and succeed in punching a hole in it. The ice is finally broken and the adult whales Fred and Wilma escape the ice.
The epilogue, narrated by Nathan, reveals that McGraw used his new reputation to uphold a contract to clean up the Exxon Valdez oil spill, Karl and Dean's de-icers made them local celebrities, Scott and Kelly got married, Jill worked her way up to a national news network, Greenpeace membership became more prominent, Adam confesses his love for Rachel and she returns his affections and they share a kiss, Adam decides to stay being a local news anchor, and both Nathan and Malik became closer to one another, and Nathan recalls about the hole in which the whales were first found and quotes "It kept getting bigger and bigger, until it let the whole world in."
In a post-credits scene, Fred and Wilma swim away free in the ocean.
Cast
- John Krasinski as Adam Carlson
- Drew Barrymore as Rachel Kramer, based on Greenpeace activist Cindy Lowry
- Ahmaogak Sweeney as Inupiat grandson Nathan to Malik
- John Pingayak as Inupiat whaler Malik
- Kristen Bell as Jill Gerard, a news reporter
- Vinessa Shaw as Kelly Meyers, based on Bonnie Carroll
- Stephen Root as Gov. Haskell
- Ted Danson as J.W. McGraw
- Kathy Baker as Ruth McGraw
- Dermot Mulroney as Colonel Scott Boyer, based on General Tom Carroll
- Rob Riggle as Dean Glowacki
- Michael Gaston as Porter Beckford
- Ken Smith as Stu
- Megan Angela Smith as Sheena
- Tim Blake Nelson as Pat Lafayette
- James LeGros as Karl Hootkin
- Mark Ivanir as Dimitri
- Stefan Kapicic as Yuri
- Andrew Daly as Don Davis
- Jonathan Slavin as Roger Notch
- Gregory Jbara as General Stanton
- John Michael Higgins as Wes Handrick
- Sarah Palin as herself
Production
The red-and-black Soviet icebreaker in the movie is modeled after real world Arktika-class nuclear-powered icebreaker which is considerably larger than the diesel-electric icebreaker used in the actual rescue effort, the 1975-built Admiral Makarov. In shots which include live footage of the 2007-built 50 Let Pobedy, the blue-and-white polar bear logo of the former operator of the Russian nuclear icebreaker fleet, Murmansk Shipping Company, is clearly visible but the atom symbol on the hull as well as the name of the vessel has been airbrushed out.