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Attenborough in Paradise and Other Personal Voyages
List Price: $29.98Our Price: $18.49You Save: $11.49 (38%)Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours Category: DVD See more DVD details
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DVD detailsActor: David Attenborough Brand: Warner Brothers DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.66:1 Running Time: 374 minutes DVD Release Date: 2007-10-02 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: BBC Warner
DVD Reviews of Attenborough in Paradise and Other Personal VoyagesDVD Review: Sir David Attenborough! Summary: 5 StarsSee my review on "Wildlife Specials" and the review on this DVD is a copy.
Buy them all!
DVD Review: Can you top Attenborough? Summary: 5 StarsKeeping it simple- Another great dvd from Attenborough. This dvd includes chapters and footage of Attenborough in the field at a young age and today. Special chapters devoted to Easter Island and Amber; and how they relate to items in his life. Also included are chapters on birds of New Guinea and his travels there. Very entertaining. There is some cross over from his dvd series on birds.
DVD Review: Rare Bird of Paradise footage Summary: 5 StarsThis is an excellent video that contains rare footage of the birds of paradise. It is extremely difficult and expensive finding materials on these birds, and Sir David Attenborough shows just how difficult it is to secure footage on these marvelous creatures. This is a video released by BBC, who by now rank no. 1 when it comes to releasing quality material on the world around us. I would recommend this to any nature lover who wants to see something of this beautiful planet before it is all gone.
DVD Review: Attenborough in Paradise Summary: 5 StarsAll these wildlife DVD's narrated by David Attenborough are wonderful, except for some which show the cruelties of the wild, the strongest live, and the weak do not. But this one is all about birds so the kids can safely watch this one. It's really enjoyable!!!!
DVD Review: Somewhat Boring, Less Nature More Personal Bio Summary: 2 StarsIf you want to hear more about Attenborough's personal interests than a serious nature doco then get this, otherwise stick with the "Life X" series and the Planet Earth and my personal favorite Blue Planet programs. Trials of Life, Living Planet, Earth:a biography, BBC Wildlife specials, BBC Wild Africa are also great for the avid collector.
I thought it a little galling that he buys a statue from Sotheby's at a relatively low price and proceeds to use his program to try to prove it's really an ancient statue of the Easter Island natives God, thus making the price of his personal property go up in the process.
I wasn't interested in most of the other programs since they focus more on Attenborough himself than Nature. This guy is a TV guy with a passion for nature and one of the most iconic commentators around like Howard Cosell, Murray Walker, John Madden and others, but his primary talent is all I'm interested in: otherwise I'll go to Wikipedia or buy a biography.
Description of Attenborough in Paradise and Other Personal VoyagesA collection of seven David Attenborough specials, Attenborough in Paradise represents some of the famed naturalist's most personal quests and passionate enthusiasms. Programming includes Attenborough tracing a piece of amber in The Amber Time Machine, discovering the history behind a strange figurine in The Lost Gods of Easter Island, and realizing a childhood dream by visiting New Guinea to record the spectacular courtship displays of the birds of paradise. The set also includes Life on Air, a 2002 tribute to Attenborough, chronicling the world-renowned natural history expert's 50-year career at the BBC, presented by Michael Palin The only thing more wonderful than David Attenborough's life as a naturalist is his peerless ability to share his enthusiasms with the rest of the world. As a priceless yet reasonably priced compilation of Attenborough's "personal best" culled from decades of BBC television, Attenborough in Paradise is a perfect companion set to the immensely popular 2007 series Planet Earth. It combines seven of Attenborough's most engaging hour-long programs to convey the sense of wonder and amazement that has made Attenborough one of the most beloved figures in the history of broadcasting. The two-disc set places understandable emphasis on more recent (and therefore more technically impressive) programs, beginning on disc 1 with "Attenborough in Paradise," a 1996 segment of The Natural World series, in which Attenborough travels into the deep jungles of New Guinea to witness the magnificent birds of paradise. The sights and sounds of these glorious creatures is something few people can experience in the wild, so this program should be considered a treasure of exceptional wildlife filmmaking. In the equally extraordinary 1971 program "A Blank on the Map," Attenborough and his tenacious film crew travel on foot, with Australian cartographer/explorer Laurie Bragg, into an unmapped mountain region of central New Guinea, culminating in an astonishing encounter with Biami villagers who had never before interacted with white explorers from the civilized world. (Attenborough's philosophy regarding the delicacy of such encounters should be considered an essential lesson for all humankind.) In the 2000 program "The Lost Gods of Easter Island," Attenborough explores the history of a strange, elongated wooden figure he purchased at auction some 10 years earlier. His curiosity takes him (and us) backwards in time to the 18th-century exploration of Easter Island, where an understanding of ancient Polynesian beliefs reveals the identity, purpose, and symbolic significance of the carved artifact that prompted Attenborough's inquisitive adventure. Disc 2 begins with a 2000 segment of the Natural World series titled "Bowerbirds: The Art of Seduction," and it's one of the most entertaining programs of Attenborough's career. In the Australian rain forests and the jungles of New Guinea, Attenborough studies the entire family of Bowerbirds, whose remarkably meticulous sculptures, structures, and decorations represent the only example in nature (outside of humankind) of creatures that attract mates through the creation of beautiful works of art. In "The Song of the Earth" (also from 2000), Attenborough investigates the history and purpose of musical communication in the natural world, studying humpback whale song, bird song, and human singing in an effort to demonstrate how man-made music is quite likely to be rooted in evolutionary behaviors of survival, territorial defense and sexual attraction. In the 2002 special "Life on Air," Monty Python alumnus Michael Palin hosts a wonderful tribute to Attenborough's career as a naturalist and BBC programming director responsible for much of the BBC's finest TV productions, including the seminal series Civilization and The Ascent of Man. Full of humor and adventure, this memorable hour will surely stand as the best-ever appreciation of Attenborough's life and work, with a veritable treasure of interviews and archival film clips, frequently poking good-natured fun at Attenborough's oft-imitated style of on-screen presentation. Finally, in "The Amber Time Machine" (a 1994 segment of The Natural World), Attenborough uses another personal artifact--a piece of ancient amber given to him by a young girl at the age of 12--to inspire an in-depth study of amber's unique preservation, in exacting detail, of insects, tree-leaves, and even lizards from tens of millions of years in the prehistoric past. The tantalizing fiction of Jurassic Park is summarily debunked by scientific experts (conclusion: ancient DNA from amber is too fragmented to re-create any extinct species through genetic engineering), but the exploratory potential of amber remains, as Attenborough characteristically engages his own curiosity to turn his treasured heirloom into a tiny world of surprising revelations. Through all seven of these marvelous programs, it's easy to see why Attenborough has retained his childlike sense of wonder: His delight in the natural world is quite literally the life force that keeps him going where few have ever been, sharing the wide, wonderful world he sees with the infectious enthusiasm of someone for whom every day brings a new opportunity for exploration or adventure, no matter how modest or grand. --Jeff Shannon
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