"FUGITIVES, FRIENDS AND FOREVER BROTHERS."
We Bare Bears: The Movie - Movie Quotes
Memorable Quotes
We're not brothers, Grizz. We're just a bunch of dumb bears who made up some story to make ourselves feel better.
— Panda
Context:
Spoken after they are captured by Agent Trout at the Canadian border. All their efforts have failed, and in a moment of despair and frustration with Grizz's leadership, Panda lashes out with the most hurtful thing he can say.
Meaning:
This line represents the emotional low point of the film. It's the moment where the pressure of being hunted and ostracized finally breaks Panda's spirit, causing him to question the very foundation of their family. It vocalizes the deepest fear they all share: that their chosen family isn't legitimate.
You're doing all this because you're afraid of what's different. Not because it's right. And we're not gonna stand for it.
— Grizz
Context:
During the climax, after freeing the other bears, Grizz directly confronts Agent Trout in front of the burning wildlife preserve. This is his final transformation from a bumbling older brother into a true leader.
Meaning:
This is Grizz's defining moment, where he stands up to his oppressor not with violence, but with a clear and powerful articulation of the film's central message. He identifies the root of Trout's hatred as fear, directly confronting the film's theme of prejudice.
Nature adapts. Maybe you should too.
— Grizz
Context:
Said by Grizz after Agent Trout has been defeated and locked in a cage himself, just before he is arrested by Officer Murphy.
Meaning:
This quote serves as the final rebuke to Agent Trout's twisted ideology. Trout constantly preaches about the "natural order," but Grizz throws his words back at him, arguing that change, adaptation, and coexistence are the true nature of the world. It is a powerful statement about the need for tolerance and evolution in societal thinking.
You are nothing but some filthy, mindless beasts!
— Agent Trout
Context:
Shouted by Agent Trout at the bears after he has successfully captured them at the Canadian border, revealing the sadistic pleasure he takes in their defeat.
Meaning:
This line encapsulates Agent Trout's xenophobic worldview. It reveals his utter contempt for the bears and his refusal to see them as anything more than animals who don't belong in his world. It's a clear expression of the dehumanizing rhetoric used to justify discrimination.