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The blue planet seas of life martha3/29/2024 ![]() ![]() Dive to Shark Volcano: 53 minutes of swimming with the sharks. ![]() Amazon Abyss : A 54-minute travelogue covering the little known and rarely seen creatures that live in the depths of this huge river.The DTS HD Master Audio 5.1 is the only option and delivers Sir David’s clear narration and the atmospheric sounds of the seas.ĭisc 3 offers us five new bonus programs, interviews and extra footage (all in Dolby Digital Stereo): The expert score by prolific film composer, George Fenton aids and abets the dramatic action that pervades the series. Colors are still quite stunning and capture of the motion dynamics of the sea world, truly spectacular. There is a surprising amount of grain but I would suspect that a variety of cameras were used and the filming conditions were not always ideal. While the photography, nearly all of which was shot in the wild, provides one thrill after another, the visual quality also shows its age and lacks the last word in clarity and edge definition that are taken for granted a decade later. Coasts: A concluding chapter on the varied life forms that make seacoasts their home.Tidal Seas: Ocean life that is shaped by the ebb and flow of the tides.Coral Seas: The community of creatures that inhabit the coral reefs.Seasonal Seas: The effects of seasonal change on life in the oceans.Bonus: “The Making of…” brief featurettes on each episode.Frozen Seas: Arctic and Antarctic oceans present a struggle for survival during the long winters.Open Ocean: Views of creatures the inhabit the seas that are farthest from land.The Deep: Life at the very bottom of the sea revealing “the.The Blue Planet: Regulation of live in the oceans by currents and sunlight.Each episode covers a particular theme as noted below: Narrated by the suave voice of Sir David Attenborough, complemented by another great George Fenton score, this series delivers just about anything and everything that anyone would care to know about this often mysterious blue world. While originally released in 2001 on DVD, this is the Blu-ray premiere, and as will become evident, was well worth the wait. This eight-episode, nearly 400-minute, BBC Earth series is the result of a multi-year project, produced by Alaister Fothergill, Martha Holmes, and Andy Byatt.
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