It would be easier to paint than to shoot so beautifully! Theoretically, the more unique someone’s useful skill is, the more they have to pay for it. In practice, of course, this is not the case, otherwise the footage shown here would be easier to draw on a computer than to pay for the work of unique specialists who know when, where, why and what to go, and then for weeks catch the right moment, which then turns into pure magic on the screen.
It is clear that the beauty of the frame is generally the patrimony that the BBC is now trying to take away only Netflix, but specifically ' Seven Worlds' will surprise even those who do not see how the BBC can shoot. And beyond that, it is not only the beauty of the frames that surprises, but also the incredibly precisely selected angles and plots - it is impossible to understand that this is luck or skill, or the very unique moment when one met the other. Dancing hip-hop in the style ' bad boy' birds, standing on tiptoe elephants, intercourse bugs and building underwater pyramids of fish.
There are almost no plots in the style ' Let's just watch them' - everywhere something happens, everywhere there is an opportunity to tell a story, and in the voice of David Attenborough - the main substitute for Drozdov in the English-speaking world. Somewhere about stealing a cub, somewhere about people who take a break between meals for ten years, but more often about how hard it is now for animals to survive. My son's favorite plot was the episode about a cemetery hamster who eats at the expense of flowers and candle wax in the series ' Europe' (by the way, my favorite) - there is a shortened version on YouTube, 'BBC Graveyard Hamster'.
Cons, however, there are also - there are often stories about bears, and a couple of times the music is repeated. Well, the planet itself with the view ' from space' in interruptions is often quite clumsy drawn.
But otherwise, it's a beautiful documentary, the best I've ever seen about the animal kingdom from the BBC. A great bonus - at the end of each hour-long episode - a small story about who shot it and how, and sometimes you really think - ' it was easier to make graphics'.
9 out of 10
It is good that they do not show any hardness - yes, there are places where a predator overtakes prey, or where there are some injuries, but there are few of them, and it is quite friendly to the child's psyche.
You may not like only that you inevitably come to the conclusion ' it is good that you managed to remove now - then there will be nothing to shoot. . . '
kinobalashow