Ok, Noah's Ark Farm didn't have any bears, so I've had to borrow mb1968ca's video for my own analysis. This is the original:
And here is my break down of it, slowing it down and then isolating key positions within the movement from which I can extrapolate the full movement from.
Like the tiger movement, there's a fair amount of flick in the paws of the bear as he walks - in fact probably more than in the tiger, being a plantigrade rather than a digitigrade, as the whole "foot" is rotating around the wrist, rather than just the toes.
Like the tiger movement, there's a fair amount of flick in the paws of the bear as he walks - in fact probably more than in the tiger, being a plantigrade rather than a digitigrade, as the whole "foot" is rotating around the wrist, rather than just the toes.
There is movement in the bear's head, but it's hard to capture from a side on view - and a completely static head doesn't look right, so in my own attempt to work out the walk I included a head-bob, which seems to work pretty well.