El legendario equipo de la BBC de David Attenborough explica y muestra la vida salvaje de todo el planeta tierra.El legendario equipo de la BBC de David Attenborough explica y muestra la vida salvaje de todo el planeta tierra.El legendario equipo de la BBC de David Attenborough explica y muestra la vida salvaje de todo el planeta tierra.
- Ganó 1 premio Primetime Emmy
- 4 premios ganados y 11 nominaciones en total
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Resumen
Reviewers say 'Life' is acclaimed for its cinematography, narration, and educational value, though it faces critiques for anthropomorphizing animals and oversimplifying biological processes. Oprah Winfrey's US narration is praised for warmth but criticized for lacking David Attenborough's depth. Some viewers feel the series prioritizes the 'wow!' factor over detailed education and complain about the lack of scale and location details. Despite these issues, 'Life' is still seen as a groundbreaking and influential nature documentary.
Opiniones destacadas
Overall good but far from great. My biggest issues were varied starting with most of this has been filmed and covered by bbc in past nature docs. My second issue was with Oprahs narrating. It was almost robotic with rarely any excitement on her part. Very unlike Attenborough who nails it every time and is very emotive. A big thing that took me right out of the doc was watching on BluRay the cuts to the commercial breaks were very very obvious. It's something I've never noticed in any of their nature docs and I've seen most repeatedly. Last complaint was a lack predation and a definite lack of showing the gore.
Great documentary. I cannot say anything negative of this, it was simply amazing
Words cannot describe how amazing this documentary is. Watching the series, you will continuously wonder how the camera crew was able to film the events and in such high definition.
When I first watched the 'Planet Earth' series, I thought the production qualities on a documentary of this genre could not be surpassed until I watched 'Life'. Narrated by David Attenborough, 'Life' feels like an improved version of 'Planet Earth' with a focus specifically on how life works. The series shows how complex, beautiful, and harsh life is with absolute clarity.
Most of us live in cities away from wildlife making us forget about the world beyond humans. 'Life' takes us on a journey into nature we never get to see in our normal lives, and for the most part, never knew existed.
When I first watched the 'Planet Earth' series, I thought the production qualities on a documentary of this genre could not be surpassed until I watched 'Life'. Narrated by David Attenborough, 'Life' feels like an improved version of 'Planet Earth' with a focus specifically on how life works. The series shows how complex, beautiful, and harsh life is with absolute clarity.
Most of us live in cities away from wildlife making us forget about the world beyond humans. 'Life' takes us on a journey into nature we never get to see in our normal lives, and for the most part, never knew existed.
Another gorgeous and illuminating nature documentary to add to the list, Life focusses on the anatomical, behavioural and tactical adaptations that lifeforms have devised to survive and thrive. Instead of a geographical basis, the series is divided up into ten episodes that each focusses on a separate class such as fish, birds, mammals and so on. This choice of episodic organization throws light on the commonalities between members of these classes while also highlighting the diversity that exists within them. There is also an episode centred on plants, an uncommon subject of nature documentaries, and another shining a spotlight on predator-prey interactions.
Like most productions of the BBC Natural History Unit, Life is a cinematographic treat. We journey to scenic locations all over the world, with habitats ranging from frigid ice caps to arid deserts, dense jungles to verdant grasslands, dark caves to deep seas. The film crews devise innovative methods to capture natural behaviours and wildlife encounters in unprecedented detail, and this series is a fitting reward for all their patience and hard work. The end-of-episode Life on Location segments give the audience an insightful peek at the travails and collaborative effort necessary to make such elaborate filming ventures successful. The music score is also very good as are the foley effects necessary to lend realism to the filmed scenes, and the narration by David Attenborough is wonderful as always.
The series also provides one many emotional moments and gets the audience invested into the storytelling. Predator-prey conflicts, familial bonding, courtship and mating rituals, territorial disputes, food hunts ... these are all different settings portrayed in the series in which we may find ourselves rooting for one party or another. Symbiotic relationships and communal ties are also illustrated to show how cooperative strategies can also succeed.
In conclusion, Life is a must-watch timeless documentary for any Nature lover.
Like most productions of the BBC Natural History Unit, Life is a cinematographic treat. We journey to scenic locations all over the world, with habitats ranging from frigid ice caps to arid deserts, dense jungles to verdant grasslands, dark caves to deep seas. The film crews devise innovative methods to capture natural behaviours and wildlife encounters in unprecedented detail, and this series is a fitting reward for all their patience and hard work. The end-of-episode Life on Location segments give the audience an insightful peek at the travails and collaborative effort necessary to make such elaborate filming ventures successful. The music score is also very good as are the foley effects necessary to lend realism to the filmed scenes, and the narration by David Attenborough is wonderful as always.
The series also provides one many emotional moments and gets the audience invested into the storytelling. Predator-prey conflicts, familial bonding, courtship and mating rituals, territorial disputes, food hunts ... these are all different settings portrayed in the series in which we may find ourselves rooting for one party or another. Symbiotic relationships and communal ties are also illustrated to show how cooperative strategies can also succeed.
In conclusion, Life is a must-watch timeless documentary for any Nature lover.
I was expecting this film to have a creationist slant, but it does not. It is a bit like David Attenborough for children. It has first class nature photography, but it is aimed at children with a dumbed-down narration by Oprah Winfrey and somewhat Disneyfied music. It sometimes has an odd prudishness about fish reproduction.
The creatures chosen are each bizarre and entertaining but ones I have seen before.
Some of the principles of evolution are presented, but in a subtle way. The focus is on strange animal behaviour, not how it could have evolved. I learned something new, that the schooling behaviour of anchovies is indeed very effective against predators.
It is not totally prettified. It shows flamingo chicks that died after they fell out of the nest.
I think the insect segment was most interesting with the most material I had not seen before. The jousting tournament with the surprise ending really tickled me.
There are bits of Disneyesque anthropomorphising, for example talking of insects "fighting for their dignity".
This is first rate family entertainment. I am ready to see it again already.
The creatures chosen are each bizarre and entertaining but ones I have seen before.
Some of the principles of evolution are presented, but in a subtle way. The focus is on strange animal behaviour, not how it could have evolved. I learned something new, that the schooling behaviour of anchovies is indeed very effective against predators.
It is not totally prettified. It shows flamingo chicks that died after they fell out of the nest.
I think the insect segment was most interesting with the most material I had not seen before. The jousting tournament with the surprise ending really tickled me.
There are bits of Disneyesque anthropomorphising, for example talking of insects "fighting for their dignity".
This is first rate family entertainment. I am ready to see it again already.
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- ConexionesReferenced in Top Gear: Africa Special, Part 2 (2013)
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- How many seasons does Life have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Planet Earth: Life
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución50 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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