Découvrez les merveilles, les mystères et les fragilités naturelles des Amériques à travers des récits extraordinaires sur la diversité de leur faune et de leurs paysages.Découvrez les merveilles, les mystères et les fragilités naturelles des Amériques à travers des récits extraordinaires sur la diversité de leur faune et de leurs paysages.Découvrez les merveilles, les mystères et les fragilités naturelles des Amériques à travers des récits extraordinaires sur la diversité de leur faune et de leurs paysages.
- Nommé pour 2 Primetime Emmys
- 3 nominations au total
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This series is amazing. The photography is sensational. I hope there is a sequel showing how it was produced. The production values are amazing. Was all the photography done from a helicopter? Did they scout the locations a long time before the producers and director put it together? I am amazed by the quality of the film, the graphics and the narration. Over how many years was it produced? How did they find that snowshoe rabbit or the dead polar bear? How did they get such marvelous closeups? It looks like it took a long time to put this together. When did they start filming? It is certainly worth watching. Give us more.
I suspect they got Tom Hanks to narrate this because he is such a popular actor. But frankly, who narrates is mostly immaterial. Some complain about him but to me he does a fine job. Others would have also.
To the meat of the programming. When you consider how extensive "The Americas" is - North America, Central America, and South America - no program, no matter how detailed it is, could cover everything about all of it.
So what they did here is first, select regions, like the Gulf Coast or the Andes, etc. Then second, in each region focus on a very small number of very interesting aspects. Things we, the audience, would likely never learn about otherwise.
So what we get are, for a few examples, frogs that live at high elevation and die each night by freezing, then thaw back alive the next day. Or hummingbirds with two very long tail feathers, doing its mating dance. Or a duck that has special armor on its legs so that it can dive and feed safely in very hot water.
My own favorite is the piece on the red land crabs of Cuba. At the right season millions of them come out of the ground in the forest, find a mate, incubate for 14 days, then make the several mile trek to the sea to disperse their billions of eggs. A few thousand don't make it across the coastal highway when big vehicles come along but there are so many it hardly makes a dent in the numbers.
Each episode has things, fascinating things, that we would likely never be exposed to otherwise. The script is interesting and humor is injected occasionally at opportune times. And the photography is stunning.
The last episode is a "making of" presentation, showing behind the scenes how the teams were able to track down and capture the video they did. It is fascinating in its own right.
We normally watch the weekly episode streaming on Peacock, the commercials are fewer and easier to handle.
To the meat of the programming. When you consider how extensive "The Americas" is - North America, Central America, and South America - no program, no matter how detailed it is, could cover everything about all of it.
So what they did here is first, select regions, like the Gulf Coast or the Andes, etc. Then second, in each region focus on a very small number of very interesting aspects. Things we, the audience, would likely never learn about otherwise.
So what we get are, for a few examples, frogs that live at high elevation and die each night by freezing, then thaw back alive the next day. Or hummingbirds with two very long tail feathers, doing its mating dance. Or a duck that has special armor on its legs so that it can dive and feed safely in very hot water.
My own favorite is the piece on the red land crabs of Cuba. At the right season millions of them come out of the ground in the forest, find a mate, incubate for 14 days, then make the several mile trek to the sea to disperse their billions of eggs. A few thousand don't make it across the coastal highway when big vehicles come along but there are so many it hardly makes a dent in the numbers.
Each episode has things, fascinating things, that we would likely never be exposed to otherwise. The script is interesting and humor is injected occasionally at opportune times. And the photography is stunning.
The last episode is a "making of" presentation, showing behind the scenes how the teams were able to track down and capture the video they did. It is fascinating in its own right.
We normally watch the weekly episode streaming on Peacock, the commercials are fewer and easier to handle.
Do yourself a favor and watch this. Surreal images & things you've never seen. Great narrating. Amazing information and pictures. I can't even wrap my head around how they got all this video. You will be amazed at the nature and the wildlife that you never knew existed. This is a great series for the whole family to watch. You will be educated as well as your kids. I can't get this show enough praise and I hope it wins a lot of awards. Watch it on a big screen TV and turn the lights out and you will be totally mesmerized and your mind will be blown. This is the best non-regular program I have ever seen in my life.
10pmpmn9
I genuinely enjoyed this series and looked forward to watching it every week. It captured so many beautiful places and creatures in the wild spaces of North and South America, from the largest to the smallest. It was also very well narrated by Tom Hanks.
I highly recommend the last episode, which highlights how the series was made. The camera crew seem to be well suited to the kind of work required to produce the series, which was very complicated and adventurous. They needed to work in many different types of environments and climates and operate their equipment in all sorts of weather conditions. They also had close encounters with wild animals, often unintentionally when they were unexpectedly approached.
If there is a DVD version of this series, I would definitely be interested in purchasing it and gifting it to my grandchildren.
I highly recommend the last episode, which highlights how the series was made. The camera crew seem to be well suited to the kind of work required to produce the series, which was very complicated and adventurous. They needed to work in many different types of environments and climates and operate their equipment in all sorts of weather conditions. They also had close encounters with wild animals, often unintentionally when they were unexpectedly approached.
If there is a DVD version of this series, I would definitely be interested in purchasing it and gifting it to my grandchildren.
Having been brought up on BBC wildlife programs narrated by the incomparable Sir David Attenborough, I was curious to see if this American made program showed anything new and if it was any good, well there wasn't much that I haven't seen before, but the camera work was glorious and Tom Hanks have it a good go, although I do find his voice a bit irritating, over all the program probably would have been great, but found I the music and background sounds too invasive, could hardly hear the poor Tom and he wouldn't have been cheap. Anyway this was so distracting from the visuals I gave up with it.
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- How many seasons does The Americas have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 45min
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 16:9 HD
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