Produced by: Alastair Fothergill , Michael Gunton
Narrated by: Sir David Attenborough , Oprah Winfrey
This remarkable collection brings together the two most riveting, highly praised natural history series ever produced, Planet Earth and its stunning follow-up, Life!
Item Number: 15620
Life
English Subtitles for the deaf and Hearing Impaired
• Life on Location - A collection of ten production video diaries showing the exhaustive efforts by the filmmaking team to bring this remarkable series to the screen
• Deleted scenes
• "Music Only" viewing option
Life - Discovery Channel Version on Blu-ray is 1080i High Definition
Planet Earth
Special features ARE NOT included in the Blu-ray edition of Planet Earth.
Includes English Subtitles for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired, as well as French and Spanish subtitles.
This remarkable collection brings together the two most riveting, highly praised natural history series ever produced, Planet Earth and its stunning follow-up, Life! Planet Earth takes viewers on a breathtaking tour of the entire planet. Revolutionary new high definition filming techniques capture rare action, impossible locations and intimate moments with our planet's best-loved and most elusive creatures. From the highest mountains to the deepest rivers, the beauty and majesty of our amazing planet is brought vividly to life like never before in Planet Earth. Life takes you closer still. Breathtaking advances in micro and macro photography enable Life to present 130 stories from the frontiers of the natural world, 54 of which have never been filmed before. Packed with excitement, revelation and entertainment, this remarkable 11-part blockbuster, narrated by Oprah Winfrey, captures unprecedented, astonishingly beautiful sequences and demonstrates the spectacular and extraordinary tactics animals and plants have developed to stay alive.
Life
From the BBC and the Discovery Channel,
producers of Planet Earth and The Blue Planet: Seas of Life, comes the
newest landmark natural history series, Life. In Planet Earth, we
brought you the world as you've never seen it before. Now, get closer
with Life. Four years in the making, filmed over 3000 days, across every
continent and in every habitat, with breathtaking new high definition
filming techniques developed since Planet Earth, Life presents 130
incredible stories from the frontiers of the natural world, 54 of which
have never been filmed before. Packed with excitement, revelation and
entertainment, this remarkable 11-part blockbuster, narrated by Oprah
Winfrey, captures unprecedented, astonishingly beautiful sequences and
demonstrates the spectacular and extraordinary tactics animals and
plants have developed to survive and thrive.
Planet Earth
You'll be filled with awe and
amazement every time you watch this stunning BBC series about our
planet's best-loved, wildest and most elusive creatures, captured on
breathtaking, high-definition film in the Earth's most extreme habitats.
Forty cameramen and hundreds of producers, scientists and guides spent
four years and $25 million to bring you this God's-eye-view of rare
action and intimate moments in impossible locations. Zoom in on the
elusive snow leopard hunting a mountain goat on a near-vertical cliff
face in Pakistan's Hindu Kush. Swim with the blind angelfish that lives
in one waterfall in one cave in Thailand. Squeeze through underground
tunnels in New Mexico's recently-discovered Lechuguilla Cave, where
crystals dangle like 18-foot chandeliers. Shot entirely in
high-definition film, with revolutionary new aerial photography. From
the team behind Blue Planet, including the esteemed and beloved Sir
David Attenborough.
Life
The Challenges of Life
Introducing
the extraordinary things animals and plants must do in order to survive
and thrive. Witness capuchin monkeys smashing open palm nuts with stone
‘hammers', hippos launching from the water into the air and chameleons
stealing prey from a spider's web. Sprint with cheetahs as they band
together to tackle ostriches; watch dolphins form perfect rings of mud
to trap fish and swim with a seal as it struggles to escape attacking
killer whales in the ice of Antarctica.
Reptiles and
Amphibians
From icy wastes to arid deserts, reptiles and
amphibians have used their ancient, cold-blooded body plan along with
sophisticated behavioral innovations to master the harshest environments
on the planet. See Komodo dragons hunting buffalo, sea snakes with one
of the most toxic venoms in the world that breed in caves, the seemingly
suicidal leaps of a waterfall toad, the tender giant African bull frog
that digs water channels to save not only its own young, but that of
others too; and lizards that can walk on water.
Mammals
New
filming techniques reveal behavior that was previously impossible to
capture in extreme locations. Fly among one of the largest migrations on
Earth, as more than ten million fruit bats leave the Congo basin and
converge in a few special trees in Zambia to feed, sprint with the tiny,
extraordinary-looking sengi as it escapes a predatory lizard, see 30
polar bears gather to feed on a bowhead whale carcass and witness the
biggest fight on Earth - male humpback whales battling for a female.
Fish
Fish
can fly, sense electricity, swim at over 100mph and even walk on land.
From the open ocean to coral reef and storm-ravaged surf to the
freshwater springs of Kenya, swim with sharks, mudskippers and convict
fish. See the hilariously named "sarcastic fringe-head" fighting for its
home territory; hunt with sailfish; glide with flying fish; enter the
secret world of courting sea-dragons; and even join the epic journey of
the tiny, cliff-climbing goby.
Birds
Birds are
supremely adaptable, capable not only of flying at phenomenal speeds and
covering great distances, but of displaying a murderous nature, running
on water in pursuit of love and even of building intricate structures.
Using aerial camera techniques, Life flies with the birds and explores
their incredible diversity and behavior: dodging the piratical frigate
birds; soaring with the lammergeyers; dancing with a thousand flamingos
in the lakes of Africa; and witnessing the extraordinary displays of
spatula-tailed hummingbirds, western grebes and bowerbirds as they all
attempt to attract a mate.
Insects
Insects are
the most diverse animal group on the planet. The key to their success is
their unique ability to reshape themselves. They possess fearsome
weapons, yet can display surprising tenderness and sophisticated
behavior. Take to the skies with millions of monarch butterflies in
Mexico, see a beetle spray boiling chemicals at its enemies, witness
giant bees fight to the death over females, join the marching columns of
grass cutter ants and spend a jeopardy-filled day with damsel flies.
Hunters
and Hunted
Every day, in the jungles, grasslands, deserts
and frozen wastelands, battles are won, fought and lost between
carnivores and their prey. See cheetahs join forces to bring down an
ostrich, a tiny stoat take on a rabbit ten times its size, elephant seal
pups snatched from their nursery pool by a killer whale, the antics of a
squirrel as it outwits a rattlesnake and at an amazing 2,000 frames per
second, the strike of a bulldog bat flying at 60 mph.
Creatures
of the Deep
Using specially developed underwater tracking
time-lapse techniques, LIFE takes a journey to the unchartered corners
of the ocean. It's here the newest discoveries are being made and the
strangest creatures live, from huge spider crabs which gather in their
thousands, seeking safety in numbers as they shed their protective
shell, to cross-dressing giant squid. Join a 250-strong pack of Humboldt
squid on a hunting expedition, see the ultimate self-sacrifice of a
Pacific giant octopus mother who starves to death tending her young and
dive under the permanent ice of Antarctica to see a seething carpet of
starfish as they devour a seal pup carcass.
Plants
The
drama of the plant world is impossible to view with the naked eye. But
using the latest time-lapse technology, all is revealed: how a Venus
flytrap snaps shut and imprisons its prey and how the animal-like
grasping hooks of the cat's claw creeper and the sticky pads of the
Boston ivy help in their fight for light. Fly with the seed that
inspired the design of gliders, watch the fastest growing plant on Earth
rocket up two feet a day and discover the water-trapping abilities of
the bizarre dragon's blood tree, which oozes red sap from its branches.
Primates
Primates
are uniquely intelligent - engaging in problem solving, communication,
tool use and intimate social interplay. Primates are uniquely
intelligent, engaging in problem solving, communication, tool use and
intimate social interplay. In the Congo, meet a tightly bound group of
western lowland gorillas led by an ancient silverback, whose
chest-beating sends shockwaves more than a mile through the undergrowth.
See grey Phayre's leaf-monkey mothers in Thailand battling for the
privilege to babysit bright orange newborns, encounter the violent
disputes of a thousand hamadryas baboons and join chacma baboons shark
egg hunting on the coast of South Africa.
The Making of LIFE
This
special behind-the-scenes episode showcases the exhaustive, remarkable
and record-breaking efforts by the LIFE filmmaking team to bring the
breathtaking images of intimate animal and plant behavior to the screen.
Planet Earth
Pole to Pole - This
episode looks at our planet as a whole and considers the key factors
that have shaped its natural history. Without freshwater there is no
life on land, while the sun dominates the lives of all animals and
plants on Earth and defines their habitats.
Mountains - This program explains the geological and volcanic forces that shaped the land and its mountain chains. Humans like to think that once they've climbed a peak, they have somehow conquered it. But they can only ever be visitors to this hostile world.
Fresh Water - Just three percent of the Planet's water is fresh water and it is our most precious resource. Where it flows or falls it controls the distribution of all terrestrial life. This episode follows the descent of rivers from their mountain sources to the sea, and showcases the unique and dramatic wildlife found within its unexplored waters.
Caves - Caves are one of the only habitats not directly driven by sunlight, but this doesn't mean there is no wildlife. This episode probes the mysterious, perpetual darkness and reveals the unknown underground world of caves, caverns and tunnels.
Deserts - When astronauts peer down on Planet Earth, the one environment they all notice are the deserts, which make up a staggering 30 per cent of the land's surface. From space they look empty and lifeless. A closer look reveals a very different picture...
Ice Worlds - A journey to the polar extremes of our planet, where for most of the year the Arctic and Antarctic are locked in ice. As the sun abandons one pole and journeys to the other, these frozen worlds undergo the most extreme seasonal transformation on the planet...
Great Plains - The vast open wildernesses of African savannah, Asian steppe, Arctic tundra and North American prairie are the great plains of the planet. Together they cover more than a quarter of the land on Earth and one living thing is at their heart - grass.
Jungles - Beautiful floating aerial shots introduce the world's most spectacular forest vistas and high-definition cameras enable unprecedented views of the species that live on the dark jungle floor.
Shallow Seas - The newly discovered coral reefs in tropical Indonesia reveal that they are one of the richest in the world. They are home to fantasy-like creatures - such as the head-butting pygmy seahorse, the flashing 'electric' clam and bands of 30-strong sea snakes...
Seasonal Forests - From the evergreen forests of the frozen North to the deciduous dry forests of the Equator, Seasonal Forests reveals the greatest woodlands on earth.
Ocean Deep - Oceans cover two-thirds of the planet, yet largely remain unexplored. For animals that dwell on the surface or within the deepest abyss, it's finding food and conserving energy that is paramount. Planet Earth travels the world to reveal the extraordinary lengths life takes in its bid to survive this immense and barren realm.
Life
"An amazing visual feat."
--Jonathan
Storm, The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 21, 2010
"Gasp inducing clarity.... Prepare to be amazed."
--Matt
Roush, TV Guide, March 21, 2010
"Dazzling vision of nature."
--Robert Philpot, Fort
Worth Star Telegram, March 21, 2010
"Nature is hot."
--Gloria Goodale, Christian Science
Monitor, March 21, 2010
"Series of stunning beauty"
--Mike Hughes, TV America
(syndicated), March 20, 2010
"Life is rich, rare and pure video gold. Life is bigger than all of
us."
--Tom Shales, The Washington Post, March 19, 2010
"It's eminently essential TV ... Pupil-popping visual eloquence."
--Tom
Shales, The Washington Post, March 19, 2010
"An 11-part series that's nothing short of mind-blowing - a shocking
view of just how vibrant and dynamic our terrestrial brethren actually
are."
--Daniel Stone, Newsweek, March 19, 2010
"Brace for a stunning armchair adventure, one that's surprising,
beautiful, moving and dangerous - just like life."
--Joanne
Ostrow, The Denver Post, March 19, 2010
"Fire up your flat screen"
--Robert Bianco, USA Today,
March 19, 2010
"An amazing spectacle."
--Jacqueline Cutler, Tribune,
March 21, 2010
"The reason flat screens, blu-ray and high-definition TV were
invented.... Dazzling and precise"
--Mary McNamara, The
Los Angeles Times, March 18, 2010
"that's what "Life" can do: make one weep over the fate of a species
once relegated to nightmares and science fiction."
--Mary
McNamara, The Los Angeles Times, March 18, 2010
"photography that is so gorgeous that every frame could win an
Oscar..."
-- Linda Stasi, New York Post, March 18, 2010
"Discovery Channel's extraordinary and extraordinarily beautiful
11-part series, "Life," ...is narrated by Oprah Winfrey, who does a
bang-up job, giving the voiceovers just the right tone - joyful when it
calls for it, serious when it's needed, tense when required."
--
Linda Stasi, New York Post, March 18, 2010
"'Life' picks up beautifully where ‘Planet Earth' left off ...
delivering a sumptuous, high-definition romp through astounding nature
footage that quite simply defines the best Discovery Channel can be."
--
Brian Lowry, Variety, March 17, 2010
"...the most remarkable sequences might be the ones that illustrate
the lengths to which the filmmakers went to bring back this footage.
They're hunting big game, all right, and they've bagged another
veritable treasure trove of it."
-- Brian Lowry, Variety,
March 17, 2010
"For those reared on "Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom," well, we ain't
in Kansas anymore. The imagery is spectacular... Take it as praise of
the highest possible order that ‘Life's' jaw-dropping pictures and
panoramic scale are enough to overshadow even Oprah's presence."
--
Brian Lowry, Variety, March 17, 2010
"The sequences in the series could fill more than a few movie
trailers. ... astonishing ... gripping... "
--Brian
Stelter, The New York Times, March 18, 2010
"...gorgeous natural history series ... Informative and fun."
--
Tom Gliatto, People, March 29, 2010
"Another stunning beauty ... Grade: A"
-- Verne Gay,
Newsday, March 17, 2010
"Life takes cameras where few have been."
-- Bruce
Schwartz, USA Today, March 18, 2010
"...stunningly beautiful ... filled with surprising close-ups of
Earth's most mysterious creatures in action."
-- John
Griffiths, US Weekly, March 29, 2010
"With one incredible sight after the next, this mesmerizing
miniseries shows just how alike humans and animals are in our everyday
fight to adapt and survive in an ever-changing world."
--Len
Feldman, National Enquirer, March 22, 2010
"Eye-boggling ... Stunning ..."
--Ken Tucker,
Entertainment Weekly, March 10, 2010
"At least as far back as the baby-boomer touchstone Mutual of Omaha's
Wild Kingdom, the nature-TV genre has been constructed in this manner,
but never so gorgeously. We are left to gawp and admire. A-"
--Ken
Tucker, Entertainment Weekly, March 10, 2010
"Get your popcorn and wow-meters ready!"
--Ileane
Rudolph, TV Guide, March 2010
"...it actually brought a lump to my throat."
-- Julie
Vandal, Elle, April 2010
"But it's fair to say that after the popularity of
"Planet
Earth,'' the Discovery Channel confronted the pressure-packed question
of whether it could produce another water-cooler show. The question's
answer? That's "Life.''
--Don Aucoin, Boston Globe, March
19, 2010
"Brilliant"
--Don Aucoin, Boston Globe, March 19, 2010
"Bottom Line: An astonishingly close-up look at the glory and
eccentricity of nature. ... honestly, there's never been anything like
"Life.""
--Barry Garron, The Hollywood Reporter, March
19, 2010
"the ingenuity of Mother Nature to adapt species to their
surroundings will elicit gasps of admiration from viewers. That was my
reaction."
-- Seth Arenstein, Cable360, March 17, 2010
"But this is no mere sequel. In tone, pacing and even narration,
everything about "Life" feels fresh and newly wondrous. That is saying
something, when you consider that "Planet Earth" set the bar
ridiculously high for nature documentary series."
--
Aaron Barnhart, Kansas City Star, March 17, 2010
Re: Oprah: "... the perfect choice for "Life."
--
Aaron Barnhart, Kansas City Star, March 17, 2010
"The Oprah Winfrey-narrated extravaganza, 'Life,' (captures) some of
the most exotic, sensationally filmed moments of our planet's natural
history..."
-- Christian Science Monitor, March 15, 2010
"...Discovery's freshest, fiercest perspective on the primal beauty
of plant and animal existence in a series that's been four years and 150
worldwide expeditions in the making."
-- Channel Guide
Magazine, March 2010
"...some of the most jaw-dropping scenes ever captured on film."
--
Channel Guide Magazine, March 2010
"Coming on the heels of Planet Earth, ...Life takes the natural
history genre a step further, using ultra high-speed high-def digital
photography to capture animal behavior that, in some cases, has never
been seen before."
-- Emmy, Issue No. 1 2010
"As with Planet Earth, the real wonder is how the hell they got those
images."
-- Outside, March 2010
"...full of how'd-they-get-that-shot moments..."
--
More, March 2010
Planet Earth
"...jaw-dropping television from
start to finish." -Sunday Express
"...sure to be the most dramatic and talked-about TV event of the year ... it might not be an overstatement to suggest that this series is so breathtaking that some viewers could find themselves at serious risk of respiratory failure." -Michael Holden, Mail On Sunday
"One programme towers head and shoulders above everything else tonight ... this is the most awesomely spectacular and wide-ranging natural history series to have hit our screens, the crowning achievement of the BBC's Natural History Unit ... Even on a non-HD screen, these images look very special. There's a clarity and depth that is closer to what we expect to see in a cinema ... With the right kind - and size - of HD TV screen, the effect is amazing." -Nigel Andrew, Daily Mail
"...it really isn't a show you can watch any less than twice. On the third viewing, I note, my boggling about the magnitude of Nature (Herds! Shoals! Teeth! Wing! Tundra!) had shifted, solipstically, to boggling about the magnitude of the humans. Dear God, but some effort has been put into this series. However amazing the creatures are that we witnessed, this is also a programme about how brilliant us guys - people - are." -Caitlin Moran, The Times
"Every few years we are treated to a series so compelling that it puts all other shows in the shade ... Every single second of these epic new films is a joy to behold ... mindblowing..." -Daily Mirror
"Planet Earth is the BBC's Natural History Unit at its biggest and boldest." -Sally Kinnes, Sunday Times
"This is the BBC doing what it does best - beautifully made, ambitious programmes fronted by a genuine, world-class expert. If I were looking forward to it any more, I would need a knife and fork for it." -Richard Hammond, Daily Mirror
"These programmes should be compulsory viewing for every school child, before they ... start to believe that it does not matter what happens to other species on this planet." -Philip Coggan, Financial Times
"...marvellous to look at ... breathtakingly beautiful photography..." -Peter Paterson, Daily Mail
"Stirring, hugely enjoyable and likely to be a deservedly massive hit ... almost every scene gained an instant place in television history." -James Walton, Daily Telegraph
"...sets a new benchmark in broadcasting ... an exquisite feast, from the opening sequence ... a natural history treat complimented expertly, as ever, by David Attenborough's polished commentary." -Robin McKie, Observer
"...filmed with such crispness and clarity that even my knackered old television, which I suspect once belonged to John Logie Baird himself, looked as if it had secretly been upgraded for high-definition broadcasts." -Thomas Sutcliffe, Independent
"...essential viewing ... crammed with grandeur ... and even humour." -Karl French, Financial Times
"Stunning footage ... it was like a snapshot of our planet in action, from its continental weather systems to its tiniest pond-life and, without trying, it instilled a deep sense of awe and respect. With a uniquely intelligent and cliché-free voiceover from David Attenborough, Planet Earth did exactly what good TV should. It showed us things we'd never get a chance to see otherwise, and left us feeling grateful for the experience. It also reminded us that the real world can be as amazing as anything conjured up by computer graphics ... a vivid reminder of why we all need to start caring, now." -Matt Baylis, Daily Express
"...the crowning glory of David Attenborough's extraordinary career." -David Chater, The Times
BAFTA® Awards
2007 - Best Original Television Music: George Fenton for Planet Earth
The Peabody Awards
2007 - Winner - The George Foster Peabody Awards recognize distinguished
achievement and meritorious public service by TV and radio stations,
networks,
producing organizations, individuals and the World Wide Web.
International Emmy Awards ®
2007 – Outstanding Cinematography for Nonfiction Programming
2007 – Outstanding Music for a Series – George Fenton
2007 – Outstanding Nonfiction Series – Maureen Lemire, Alastair
Fothergill,
Mark Linfield
2007 – Outstanding sound Editing for Nonfiction Programming - Kate
Hopkins