Green Planet (BD/4KUHD) [4K UHD]
C**T
Very good
Very entertaining and relaxing.
H**Y
BUY IT NOW!!!!!
AMAZING show!!! Extremely underrated, but it is so full of amazing plant and green life knowledge and education!!!
M**O
A lovely show!
I love plants and getting to learn more about them in a dvd format is wonderful. I can go back and watch on my own time as well as have a physical copy to keep as a trophy and for future enjoyment without logging onto the internet. This series was deeply beautiful to me and I hope they make more spotlighting plants too.
T**G
Great video but case was broken
This is a great documentary, as always the video is above expectations. Great quality great sound. Only problem is the case was broken. The disc were free floating inside case. The clips that hold the discs were broken an not even inside the case. Case was sealed good, so had to be broken before shipping. Played all 4 disc an no damage. Will have to buy a new case for them as it is a program I will watch again.
B**S
Beautiful but doctrinaire
For starters, the camerawork is just beyond anything you've ever seen. And they tell you how they invented and built and operated all the rigs for motion time-lapse. It's well worth the price of admission.And everyone else can speak to the other high points of this show. But I gotta pick a bone:The old-school doubled-down Darwinism is just kinda nauseating. You can be an evolutionist if you want (I'm not), but to see EVERYTHING IN NATURE strictly through the narrow lens of "species competition" is just... ugh. It's a myopic and threadbare narrative that restricts the marvels of nature shown here to a miserable and boring rehash of an outdated hypothesis. And it's not even real; it's manufactured. Here's one example from just the first episode:There's a whole sequence about the giant water lilies and how they stab and smother all the other water plants to capture the light. Well, ok, they do. But the sequence *starts* when the lilies are just growing, and *ends* when they are "dominant." But this is only a fraction of the year -- obviously, if you think about it. Fall comes. Winter follows. The things die back. *Something* eats them (even if "only" microbes.) Other plants fill the space. The lilies aren't "victors in a war"; they are a piece of a cyclical succession that fills a niche in space and time, and then recedes for a while. That truth, equally or more important, is deliberately obscured by the script.And it goes on in segment after segment. The balsa tree, the fungus that "controls" the leaf-cutter ants... pretty much everything is anthropomorphized as a competitor and manipulator. But if you have the worldview to see it (Christian, Jewish, Buddhist--practically anything but Darwinian/Marxist/Hegelian/robber-baron), it is evident that *the science tells us* that plants cooperate, just as much, or more, than they compete. Trees share resources through mycelial networks.If you can get past archaic Darwinism (and Attenborough sadly cannot), you can begin to ask questions like "Are squirrels forgetful... or do they leave some acorns in the ground *on purpose*, by design?" --or "Are the understory plants leafing out as early as possible, to snatch what light they can before they are shaded out by the aggressive canopy... or are the tall trees leafing out late *by design*, so there can *be* an understory to cover the soil and protect their roots and nurture the mycelium and feed the animals that transport the seeds and the fertility?"There is so much good in this film -- which you can't maybe get anywhere else. So buy it. Watch it. But see beyond it: see the things Attenborough can't see. Ask the questions he can't imagine asking. Watch the footage here through a lens of science and naturalism and questioning, instead of the old dogmatic Darwinist rut. Disbelieve the "competition narrative" and find a richer world.
J**S
Whole family can watch beautiful nature
After hearing about this show and watching the trailer I was extremely excited to start watching, and when I started doing so I quickly realized this was even above my expectations.I honestly had not felt this way about a documentary since Planet Earth and Planet Earth 2, two documentaries that really went above and beyond compared to anything else from their time, pioneering and taking documentary making to the next level.Such is the case with "The Green Planet" which presents itself as a legitimate heir, able to withstand the weight of the crown.The most impressive and revolutionary aspect of the show is without a doubt the way in which they managed to capture the dynamism of plant life , greatly thanks to revolutionary camera and filmmaking technology and know-how, produced by a team of veterans, toped with the well-polished narrative style of David Attenborough and backed by what I can only imagine were hours upon hours of extensive and well-directed work.This is an absolute gem of a documentary series and I would greatly recommend it to anyone.
D**A
Plants like you have never seen before
If you like other documentaries by Sir David Attenborough, "Green Planet" will be your next favorite series. Everything you didn't know about plants is revealed in high definition, excellent cinematography, and beautifully narrated. It's so good, I watched all the episodes in a week.
B**N
outstanding as always David Attenborough excels
great documentary
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