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  YOU ARE HERE : Home > Categories > Entertainment > Television > Nature's Great Events
  ProdID: 2735 - Nature's Great EventsType of Show: Documentary Series Product Score: 10.0 
Nature's Great Events

Price : $39.99 (DVD)
Supplier :
Available : September 2010

Using state of the art filming technology and narrated by Sir David Attenborough, Nature's Great Events captures the Earth's most dramatic and epic wildlife spectacles and the intimate stories of the animals caught up in them.

From the flooding of the Okavango Delta in Africa, to the great summer melt of ice in the Arctic and the massive annual bloom of plankton in the northern Pacific Ocean, each programme features a different event set in one of the world's most iconic wildernesses.

Witness tiny grizzly bear cubs emerging from their den in snow-covered mountains, baby elephants struggling to survive against drought, a lion attack in Africa, humpback whales hunting as a team, the world's largest concentration of dolphins and sharks gathering off the coast of South Africa; plus polar bear families navigating their precarious way on thinning ice.

This fantastic series employs revolutionary ultra high speed shooting, motion controlled photography, stunning aerial and lapse time techniques pioneered on Planet Earth to reveal, in intimate detail, some of the best-loved wildlife, as their lives become entwined with these dramatic events.

Combining the epic cinematography of Planet Earth, with all the emotion, intimacy and storytelling of a wildlife diary, this dramatic series charts the effects of seasonal changes which each year transform parts of the planet, drawing in thousands of animals and determining their fate. But who are the winners and losers of Nature's Great Events?

Special Features:
    •  Six ten minute making of featurettes - one to accompany each programme.

    •  As seen on TVOne
    •  Also available on Blu-Ray
Storyline
Actors / Animation
Soundtrack
Personal Choice
craftmadhermit   Review #4088 - Dated: 23rd of November, 2010
  Author: craftmadhermit

Sir David Attenborough once again leads viewers on a stunning visual journey, filled to the brim with information, through our fascinating natural world, this time focusing more on the big events that happen in nature than the animals or locations themselves.
The music is thoroughly enjoyable and fitting to the episodes, without interfering at all with Attenborough's narration, and each episode has its own "hard hitting" moments (for the softies like me.. so just be careful if watching with younger children), where it really brings home the "survival of the fittest" rule.. eg: a lion cub, lost and crying, left behind by its Pride because it was so hungry it didn't have the energy to keep up (this one nearly made me turn the tv off, it was that hard to watch), and the dying moments of a young Gannet after its first flight where its crash landing did too much damage for it to survive.

The 1st episode, "The Great Melt", would've definitely been one of my favourites in the series. Watching an enormous polar bear trying to haul himself out of the water, after walking on the Winter ice which SHOULD have been plenty hard enough to be safe, yet turned out to be much thinner than usual, and therefore very easy to break, was absolutely heat breaking! Definitely an episode that hit home hard about how much our world and the climates are changing, plus fascinating footage of 2 animals I have hardly seen any dvds on... Narwhals and Belugas.

Each episode is followed by a "diary", showing behind the scenes of that particular episode, some of the challenges faced with filming it (the grizzly bears and camera cables are NOT a good combo! LOL!), and the lengths they went to in order to solve these challenges. I found this to be a great added extra, especially with my own interest in wildlife photography, and is something I wish they'd do with a lot more nature DVDs!

This 2 disc series is definitely worth having in the collection, and is a good example of just how our world is changing and affecting the wildlife within it, and why we need to start working to look after it a lot better.

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Printed at 12:08:17am on Sunday 21st April 2024