
A new fantasy film offers a vision for how Californians can coexist with other large mammals
'The Legend of Ochi,' released in U.S. theaters on April 25 and available to stream starting May 20, follows one tween's quest to return an injured blue-faced baby primate to its home. Twelve-year-old Yuri's (Helena Zengel) Eastern European community, on the fictional island of Carpathia, has long warred with the fictional animals — called ochi. (Her dad Maxim, played by Willem Dafoe, is a fervent ochi-hater.)
Bucking the inherited notion that ochi are vicious creatures to be destroyed, Yuri finds she has more in common with the creatures than she was taught to believe. Healing the bond between the species also helps her heal bonds within her own species — that of her immediate family.
Isaiah Saxon, raised in Aptos, Calif., wrote and directed the film, and watching it, it's easy to find links to issues facing Californians today. The state is home to what may be the densest population of black bears in the world, a growing number of gray wolves and ample mountain lions in some regions. Not all residents are happy about it.
Beginning in the 1970s, a sea change in state and federal policy allowed large predators to make a comeback across California. Meanwhile, humans have expanded into wild areas while a changing climate can drive animals into the path of people. The increased overlap of man and beast has led to an increase in conflict, according to California wildlife officials.
Ranchers in rural pockets of the state who lose cattle to wolves fear for their livelihood, and a couple told The Times they want to be able to shoot some of the protected canids — to teach them a lesson. Siskiyou and Lassen County leaders are calling on the state to do something about the economic toll the wolves are taking on ranchers, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife recently approved stronger harassment methods, including assaulting the animals with noise from drones.
Galvanized by recent lethal animal attacks — including the state's first fatality linked to a black bear in 2023 — California lawmakers have called for harsher methods to ward off wildlife. A state bill originally aiming to allow El Dorado County to use hounds to chase away mountain lions passed a state Senate committee last month, but was changed to lose the dogs. It would now require the state wildlife department to enhance a conflict reduction program in part by engaging in public outreach and offering grant funding for measures to protect livestock. A similar bill permitting the use of dogs to chase black bears away from places where humans decide the bears are unwanted died in a state Assembly committee last month but was granted reconsideration — an opportunity for another vote next year.
But many Californians believe in a different kind of coexistence — one that often centers the rights of animals to inhabit their native territory.
Speaking to The Times, Saxon said California's wildlife anxieties weren't consciously on his mind when he created 'Legend of Ochi,' but parallels between the imaginary world of his debut feature film and his home state emerged during a phone interview.
Saxon, who grew up in the redwood forests of Santa Cruz County, recalled a 'constant fear of mountain lions' in the community where he was raised. There was also a fervent believer in Sasquatch and a museum in Santa Cruz dedicated to the hirsute, mythical creature.
The 42-year-old recalled being told that 'If I wandered off into the woods, far enough away from our house, then Sasquatch or mountain lions, or, you know, real adventure and a real kind of sense of magic [awaited] in the forest. So I think that was somehow deep in me when I was coming up with this story.'
In the mountains he hails from, the community often breaks down into 'hippies or rednecks,' said Saxon. The way he describes it, those are crude terms for a more nuanced community divide: 'people who want to live symbiotically with nature, and then people who want to use force against it.'
When he was about 6 years old, he'd visit his best friend's family at a nearby property where he'd see them shooting blue jays for sport. Then he'd return to his home of vegetarians.
Later on in life, he'd see the same dichotomy play out elsewhere in California. Saxon moved to L.A. about a decade ago, and, until the Eaton fire burned his house down, lived in Altadena. Shortly before moving to the foothills community about two and a half years ago, he heard that some of his would-be neighbors had illegally shot a mountain lion accused of slaughtering animals in the neighborhood, including all the goats on the farm next to what would become his home.
Similar acts of vigilante justice animate his film. An opening montage includes a bloodied sheep ostensibly mauled by an ochi. Sometimes the primates bite when afraid. In one scene, Maxim reminds a ragtag gang of young boys he's trying to raise into skilled hunters what they're fighting for: Their families have lost geese, cats, livestock, a sense of safety.
Saxon said he understands the impulse to violently retaliate against an animal that's caused damage, but ultimately stands against it.
'It's a spiritual choice to not just remove that animal from that situation,' he said. 'And by that, what I mean is that you would have to have a respect for the sentience and experience of that mountain lion to not choose to solve it that way.'
The goal of the film, Saxon said, was not just to advocate for not killing wild animals that live near humans. 'It's not just 'let's not destroy them.' It's 'we would be better off if we learned from them,'' he said.
In Saxon's childhood home, Jane Goodall was one of three agreed-upon patron saints. (The others were the Dalai Lama and the Beatles.) And in a recent conversation with Goodall on A24's podcast, he described his debut feature film as 'a critique of anthropocentrism.'
The films reveals the ochi can do things people can't, like communicating through sensations. And they defy their caricature of red-eyed, bloodthirsty beasts. Sporting globular dark eyes and fuzzy, caramel-colored fur, the baby ochi — a physical puppet that has been likened to a Gremlin and Baby Yoda — is quite cute.
Saxon imbued Yuri's parents with polarized views on wildlife. Maxim sees humans as apex beings with a right to control the environment. Dasha, Yuri's mother (played by Emily Watson), has dedicated her life to studying the ochi, but — according to Saxon — accepts that nature can sometimes be beyond the grasp of human conception.
Whisper-voiced Yuri acts as an audience avatar, not yet solidified in her values but figuring them out on her own.
'My hope with the film is that kids can enter in as curiously and open-mindedly as Yuri is in the film, and make up their own minds and not let adults stand in the way of what they think is right and true,' Saxon said.
Children's movies featuring animals often reinforce stereotypes that predatory animals are inherently evil. For example, consider the Disney classic 'The Little Mermaid' (1989) or the 2004 DreamWorks film 'Shark Tale,' both of which show the sharks as menacing, notes a blog for the UC Davis Animal Behavior Graduate Groups. Or Disney's 'Frozen,' from 2013, where wolves gnash as they pursue the heroine.
There are exceptions and it can get messy. 'The Lion King,' the 1994 Disney blockbuster, features an apex predator (the titular lion) as the hero — but he has to change his behavior to eat grubs as part of his hero's journey. Meanwhile, the primary villain is another lion who stays a predator.
Amaroq Weiss, senior wolf advocate for the Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting endangered animals, believes positive narratives about predators are key at a moment in which people and wildlife are increasingly overlapping, driven by human development and a climate change.
'For people who live in towns and cities who are now getting to meet the wild neighbors and not knowing much about them, that's an easy way to just immediately form a fearful impression of them,' she said, 'which why it's even more important … that we do get the message out to people as as young and early as possible.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Epoch Times
3 hours ago
- Epoch Times
‘The Wildman of Shaggy Creek': Kid-Friendly Creature Feature
Unrated | 1h 16m | Adventure, Thriller, Fantasy, Kids | 2025 The throwback, family friendly monster movie reminiscent of ' The Legend of Ochi,' 'The Wildman of Shaggy Creek' is director Jesse Edwards sophomore full-length feature, following 2022's 'The Stolen Valley.'


New York Post
9 hours ago
- New York Post
Why Meghan Markle's ‘fragile' employees waited years to accuse her of bullying
Nobody wants the wrath of 'Duchess Difficult.' Former The Times royal correspondent Valentine Low explained why Meghan Markle's former staffers waited years before they accused her of bullying in Low's 2022 book 'Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind the Crown' 'There was strong elements of nervousness and worry,' Low stated on Kinsley Schofield's 'Unfiltered' podcast last week. 'Some of them were still in a very fragile state.' 7 Meghan Markle. / The author added that Markle's employees 'were very worried about what Meghan would do to them' and 'viewed her capacity for revenge as infinite.' 'It was two and a half years later. They'd left the employ of the Royal Family and they still were in a psychologically delicate state as a result of what happened to them at that time,' Low also said. 7 Valentine Low. In addition, Low claimed that the staffers didn't want to be in the spotlight because of their allegations against Markle, 44. 'They are happy leading their new lives, doing whatever new job it is they do. They don't want the media on their doorstep,' he said. 'They don't want to have a target on them.' 7 Valentine Low's book that came out in 2022. St. Martins Press In his book, Low published anonymous staffers' claims about the alleged abuse they suffered working under the 'Suits' alum. The ex-employees claimed Markle — who they referred to as a 'narcissistic sociopath' — went on screaming tirades. On the podcast, Low noted that if Markle and Prince Harry 'were difficult to work for then, they're difficult to work for now.' 7 Prince Harry and Meghan Markle on their wedding day in May 2018. Getty Images He also recalled how the couple's legal team allegedly reacted to the book being published in 2022. 'We got a very, very long letter from their lawyers. And then sometime later we got another slightly less long letter from their lawyers, basically being very feisty, very strong,' Low said, adding, 'We published, and then we didn't hear a word from them.' 7 Meghan Markle speaks onstage at The Archewell Foundation Parents Summit: Mental Wellness event in NYC in Oct. 2023. Getty Images for Project Healthy Minds Low also stated: 'If the Times runs a story like that, and doesn't get sued, there probably something in it. And suddenly you realize all those tabloid stories earlier suggesting she might be the 'Duchess Difficult,' actually maybe they're true.' Markle's spokesperson told The Post that Low is blasting 'harmful gossip' and 'continues to desperately recycle false, offensive, and long-discredited allegations in an apparent bid to sell books and resuscitate relevance.' 7 Meghan Markle and Prince Harry left the royal family in 2020. / 'These claims—rooted in anonymous, unverifiable sources—form part of a broader and deeply troubling agenda that seeks to dehumanize a woman who has consistently stood up for fairness, dignity, and truth,' the rep continued. 'The Duchess has faced years of unfounded attacks masked as journalism in a never-ending smear campaign, beginning only once she was affiliated with the remains undeterred by the noise and firmly focused on her family and work,' the spokesperson added. 7 Meghan Markle with Prince Harry. Instagram/@meghan Markle was in the royal family from 2018 until 2020 when she and Harry, 40, quit their royal duties and moved to America. The mother of two faced other bullying accusations from some of her former staffers — who dubbed Markle a ''Mean Girls' teenager' — in a Vanity Fair report that came out in January. Last year, a report from the Hollywood Reporter claimed Markle instills fear in her staff, with one insider describing her as a 'dictator in high heels' who has reduced 'grown men to tears.' Markle's team has denied all bullying claims.

Elle
14 hours ago
- Elle
Katie Holmes And Joshua Jackson's Complete Relationship Timeline
Katie Holmes and Joshua Jackson have officially reunited. The former Dawson's Creek stars are collaborating on Holmes's upcoming film Happy Hours, which she is set to direct and star in alongside Jackson. Since the pair have been spotted filming scenes around New York City, fans are speculating about a possible romantic rekindling as they previously dated decades ago. But a source recently clarified that they aren't back together. The insider told Entertainment Tonight that Holmes and Jackson are 'just friends.' The source added, 'They have a special bond and love how excited fans are. Rekindling a romantic relationship is not likely.' Ahead, the full history of their relationship. Holmes and Jackson met in the '90s when they co-starred on the hit teen drama, Dawson's Creek. The show ran for six seasons from 1998 to 2003. Their characters, Joey Potter (Holmes) and Pacey Witter (Jackson), engaged in an on-again-off-again relationship throughout the series before finally getting married in the end. And the actors took their romance offscreen. In a 1998 Rolling Stone interview, Holmes, then 19, alluded to her IRL relationship with Jackson, which reportedly had already ended by then. 'I had really good luck this past year, and I had a really wonderful, amazing experience,' she said. The journalist then mentioned that she has it on 'good authority' that her great dating experience was with her Dawson's Creek co-star. 'I'm just going to say that I met somebody last year,' she responded. 'I fell in love, I had my first love, and it was something so incredible and indescribable that I will treasure it always. And that I feel so fortunate because he's now one of my best friends.' She continued, 'He's been in the business so long, and he's really helped me. I respect him as a friend and as a professional.' Jackson appeared on an episode of the Canadian talk show, George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight. In the interview, he spoke about a recent phone call he received from Holmes. 'Like any old friend, it was like, "Oh, hi, how are ya? What's going on?," "I had a kid," "Yeah, that's crazy, I heard." It was nice, it was very nice, actually.' At the time, he was in a relationship with the German actress Diane Kruger. In an interview with The Times, Jackson spoke about his former relationship with Holmes. 'We were kids,' he said, 'so it was a full-on stars-moon-sky romance.' He also shared that the Dawson's Creek cast have a WhatsApp group chat. 'It doesn't get a lot of use but every once in a while someone will crop up,' he said. '[In January] we passed the 25th anniversary [of the show] so there was a flurry of texts. It really centers around, "Oh my God, I can't believe that we all went through that thing together." It's obviously such a formative point in all our lives.' Holmes was interviewed for The Times and was asked about the Dawson's Creek WhatsApp group, which she seemingly didn't know anything about. 'All of us text every now and then, but I wasn't aware of the WhatsApp,' she said. 'But you know what? I'm really bad at WhatsApp. I never check it because it's a little too much.' But she did share that she keeps in touch with the cast 'every now and then.' She added, 'Everyone's grown up and is busy, but the bond will forever be there.' Jackson appeared on an episode of Jesse Tyler Ferguson's podcast, Dinner's on Me. During a conversation about Dawson's Creek, Jackson revealed that he and Holmes were still 'very close.' He said, 'It's not a daily call. Sometimes it's not a weekly, or monthly, or even a half-yearly call, but when you're always that, like, I know you know.' Holmes announced that she and Jackson were going to be working together again on a new film, Happy Hours. 'Working with Josh after so many years is a testament to friendship,' she wrote. ' HAPPY HOURS is a love story that includes so many people I adore. We can't wait for everyone to see what we make.' Holmes is set to direct, write, and star in Happy Hours with Jackson. According to Deadline, the forthcoming trilogy is 'a story about two people (played by Holmes and Jackson) navigating their relationship within the challenges of careers and family responsibilities and the pursuit of love, despite life's inevitable obstacles. It's a character-driven dramedy that explores the emotional journey of young loves who reconnect as adults, with the connective thread of shared joys, loss, and hope.' The rest of the cast includes Constance Wu, Mary-Louise Parker, Donald Webber Jr., and John McGinty. Production on the first of the three films is currently underway in New York. The same day as Holmes' Instagram post, she and Jackson were spotted filming Happy Hours in NYC. Holmes and Jackson were photographed running lines. A source shut down offscreen dating rumors, telling Entertainment Tonight, 'Rekindling a romantic relationship is not likely. They are just friends.' The insider added, 'Josh and Katie are excited to be working together again. They have a special bond and love how excited fans are.' They were seen shooting a scene in Washington Square Park. Jackson was pushing a stroller, possibly hinting that their characters will have a baby in Happy Hours. The actors ventured to Brooklyn to film, and Holmes was in director mode. ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE. Juliana Ukiomogbe is the former Assistant Editor at ELLE. Her work has previously appeared in Interview, i-D, Teen Vogue, Nylon, and more.