Life
Four being in the making, filmed over 3000 days, across every continentand in every habitat, Life is the latest wildlife blockbuster from the BBC’s award-winning Natural History Unit, the producers of Planet Earth and The Blue Planet. Packed with excitement, revelation, entertainment, and stunning screen firsts, this breathtaking ten-part epic presents 130incredible tales from the frontiers of the natural world. Learn theglorious variety of life onEarth and the spectacular and extraordinary tactics animals and plants have developed to stay alive. This is evolution in action; individual creatures under extreme pressure to overcome challenges from adversaries and their environment, pushing the boundaries of actions.This enthralling BBC series examines “the lengths living beings go to to stay alive,” in the words of Sir David Attenborough (Oprah Winfrey narrates the Discovery Channel version). Aided by breathtaking high-definition cinematography, the makers of Planet Earth explore the more colorful strategies the world’s creatures use to procreate, avoid predators, and obtain nourishment. Cameras travel even if the air, under the water, and right into the faces of insects, like the alien visage of the stalk-eyed glide. Apart from for “Challenges of Life” and “Hunters and Hunted,” each episode covers a different category, such as mammals and birds. Among the more memorable images: three cheetahs go with the unrelenting rhythm of mobsters, a school of flying fish glides through the air with the grace of ballerinas, and a Jesus Christ lizard skips across the water, like, well, you know. The weirdest sights array from a pebble toad bouncing away from a spider like a rubber ball and brown-tufted capuchin monkeys pounding palm nuts with stone tools like the apes in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Witty writing and proficient editing, which distills thousands of hours of footage, make the learning go down simple (at one point, Sir David references Jurassic Park, which featured his brother, Richard).
If the sound effects seem overamped, George Fenton’s score is always on the money, adding humor and suspense at crucial moments (martial drums for the mud skippers, nauseous brass for the Darwin’s beetle). Nonetheless, delicate sensibilities may find some sequences disturbing, as when Komodo dragons feed on a water buffalo or when a leopard seal dines on a penguin (according to Attenborough, the Komodo siege caused the camera operators “emotional turmoil”). More often, the filmmakers capture the moment of impact before moving on. The set comes complete with 10 featurettes on the four-year production. –Kathleen C. Fennessy
Stills from Life (Click for larger image)
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