Product Description
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From the Emmy-winning team behind Planet Earth and The Blue
Planet comes Frozen Planet, the epic tale of two disappearing
wildernesses. The Arctic and Antarctic remain the greatest
wildernesses on Earth. The scale and beauty of the scenery and
the sheer power of the elements are unmatched anywhere else on
our planet. And against all odds, these vast, frigid environments
are teeming with life. Using the latest camera technology, Frozen
Planet captures unimaginable imagery above and below the ice, and
follows the extraordinary fluctuations that accompany the changes
of seasons in this most extreme of environments, often for the
first time. Frozen Planet takes you inside a polar bear’s den to
witness a mother polar bear and her newborn cubs, showcases the
thrilling hunting tactics employed by a pod of killer whales to
launch a seal off an ice floe, uses time-lapse photography to
allow you to witness the amazing underwater fauna thriving around
Mr. Erebus, the world’s most southerly volcano, and much, much
more. Using crystal clear high definition cinematography, Frozen
Planet will open your eyes to the remarkable colors and variety
of life in this frigid environment. With the Poles under grave
threat from climate change, this extraordinary series provides a
chance to explore these great wildernesses before they change
forever.
The Frozen Planet DVD and Blu-ray will feature the original BBC
broadcast version, with narration by world-renowned naturalist
David Attenborough (Planet Earth, Life, The Blue Planet).
.com
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Saying that the excellence of Frozen Planet is predictable is
not to diminish it with faint praise, but rather to acknowledge
that it meets the extraordinarily high standards of all the BBC's
nature documentaries--starting with the mother ship, Planet
Earth, and continuing through Human Planet, Wild Pacific, Ganges,
and all the others. Narrated as usual by the redoubtable David
Attenborough, these seven episodes (on three discs, plus bonus
material) take us to the Arctic and Antarctica, the two most
remote and least hospitable areas on the planet. And yet, despite
environments where temperatures reach minus 70 degrees Celsius
and the sun doesn't shine for half the year, life flourishes. Not
surprisingly, there's a lot of attention given to seals,
penguins, and polar bears--so much, in fact, that as engaging as
these sequences are (including those depicting male bears and
elephant seals waging bloody warfare against would-be suitors
trying to horn in on their mates), one might be forgiven if a
certain igue eventually sets in. Fortunately, there's a great
deal more, especially in the more diversified Arctic: from slugs,
snails, and caterpillars that freeze solid in winter and thaw in
the spring (a cycle that repeats year after year until, at age
14, the insect finally becomes a moth) to minke whales, beluga
whales, and narwhals (the single-horned "unicorn of the sea"),
from seabirds and cod gathering by the millions to a large pack
of wolves tracking a herd of bison (one of many extraordinary
aerial sequences) and caribou in mass migration. There are
breathtaking s of the landscape as well, including a glacier
in Greenland that advances at a rate of 40 meters per day, as
well as a stunning depiction of the aurora borealis. Finally,
there is the human element; in episode six, "The Last Frontier,"
we visit Longyearbyen, Norway, the northernmost town on the
planet, and the Dolgan, a tribe in Siberia who hunt walrus with
harpoons and scale sheer cliffs to gather eggs to sustain
themselves. Finally, the seventh and last episode, "On Thin Ice,"
chronicles in alarming detail the climate changes, including the
rapid loss of ice, that point to serious consequences for the
entire world within a few decades.
All of this is presented by way of the kind of magnificent,
gorgeous camera work that beggars verbal description. Each
episode also contains a "freeze frame" segment explaining how the
camera crews captured a particular sequence, sometimes very much
at their own peril, while bonus material includes several dozen
short "video diaries" and "Frozen Planet: The Epic Journey," an
hour-long compilation of some of the series' best moments. --Sam
Graham