More adventures for the Robinson family in the wilderness

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Movie
German title More adventures for the Robinson family in the wilderness
Original title The Further Adventures of the Wilderness Family
Country of production United States
original language English
Publishing year 1978
length 105 minutes
Age rating FSK o. A.
Rod
Director Frank Zuniga
script Fred R. Krug ,
Arthur R. Dubs
production Arthur R. Dubs
music Gene Kauer ,
Douglas M. Lackey
camera John Hora
cut Tom Boutross ,
John Joseph
occupation

Other Wilderness Adventures of the Robinson Family is an adventure film directed by Frank Zuniga in 1978 . It is the second film after The Robinson Family Adventures in the Wild (1975). With more adventures of the Robinson family in the wilderness another movie in 1979 was filmed as a sequel.

action

It's been half a year since the Robinson family moved to the remote wilderness on the outskirts of Los Angeles . A few weeks earlier they had decided to stay there and continue their lives in the wilderness. And this time, too, many adventures and dangers await the family. One night a wolverine kills all of the family's chickens. But it gets worse. When winter hits the mountains with all their might, some wolves pay a visit to the family. And the wolverine becomes active again: it gets to work in the pantry, where the meat food is stored, and marks all the pieces. This makes the food inedible even for wolves and humans. To survive, Skip has to get new food and goes hunting with his son. They kill an elk and bring the animal home, dismantled in pieces.

One day the wolves are around again when Skip is walking with the children on the shore of a lake. The wolves chase towards the children who are just starting or walking ahead with the dog Kress and a sledge. During the escape, Toby breaks into the ice and can only be rescued by his father and Jenny with great difficulty. Meanwhile, Kress drives away the wolves. A little later the family celebrates Christmas together and Boomer unexpectedly arrives, who stays with the Robinsons for a few days. When he later says goodbye, the children accompany him part of the way. When walking back home, they get lost and get lost in the wilderness. As darkness falls, the children see no other way out to spend the night in the wilderness. You build a snow cave and spend the night in it.

The next morning they are discovered by chance by their father and the dog, who have gone on a search. Skip can safely bring his children home. Pat spent the whole night almost sleepless and worried there. She lets Skip feel this too. Skip notices that his wife has struggled to cope with life in the wild for the past few hours and days. Pat also becomes ill and develops pneumonia, which worsens. The failure of the radio makes the situation even more precarious. He knows he must act now if Pat is to have any chance of recovery. So he goes to get help.

On the way, he observes on a rock that a fire is blazing over the log cabin that the children have kindled to scare away the wandering wolves that have climbed to the roof. So he turns back to see what happened. Suddenly a helicopter approaches. A friend of the family, who is also a doctor, went out to inspect the situation out of concern about the unanswered radio contact, which had not been made for days.

In the German Blu-ray version from 2013, however, it can be seen that a conflagration breaks out during the attack by the wolves after the raccoon knocked over the kerosene lamp. The fire spreads across the floor and the curtains to the ceiling. Sufficient snow will later penetrate through a hole in the roof to extinguish the fire.

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