Have you ever wondered what a day in the life of an orangutan might look like? Their lifestyle is almost unimaginably different than our own busy, screen-filled lives. David Attenborough’s latest nature documentary for Netflix, The Secret Lives of Orangutans, takes viewers deep into the jungles of Sumatra for a privileged look at these elusive great apes.
Filmed in the protected Suaq Forest, home to over 200 individually observed orangutans, the documentary treats us to stunning aerial views of the lush green canopy and swampy forest floor habitat. Featuring cutting-edge camera techniques like small drones, we see these solitary orange-furred creatures like never before. We follow several focal individuals—grandmother Friska, her daughter Ellie, and Ellie’s daughter Eden—to learn about their relationships and journey through life stages.
The film looks especially at their daily activities and social behaviors. We discover how male orangutans loudly declare future travel plans...
Filmed in the protected Suaq Forest, home to over 200 individually observed orangutans, the documentary treats us to stunning aerial views of the lush green canopy and swampy forest floor habitat. Featuring cutting-edge camera techniques like small drones, we see these solitary orange-furred creatures like never before. We follow several focal individuals—grandmother Friska, her daughter Ellie, and Ellie’s daughter Eden—to learn about their relationships and journey through life stages.
The film looks especially at their daily activities and social behaviors. We discover how male orangutans loudly declare future travel plans...
- 10/20/2024
- by Naser Nahandian
- Gazettely
So far in 2024, Netflix movies have been off to a thrilling start with hit titles such as Damsel, Atlas, A Family Affair, and The Union. But the year isn't over yet! To finish out an excellent year of movies, Netflix announced its full slate of fall movies on Aug. 28, and we can look forward to even more hot titles of every genre, from horror to holiday, featuring some of the biggest stars.
Among the biggest and most-anticipated titles on the horizon include Joey King's dystopian sci-fi flick Uglies, which also stars Outer Banks favorite Chase Stokes; horror movies like It's What's Inside, Don't Move, and Time Cut; Anna Kendrick's directorial debut Woman of the Hour; and a full slate of Christmas rom-coms starring Lindsay Lohan, Lacey Chabert, and Christina Milian.
More and more release dates for Netflix movies coming this year have been announced, and below we’ve...
Among the biggest and most-anticipated titles on the horizon include Joey King's dystopian sci-fi flick Uglies, which also stars Outer Banks favorite Chase Stokes; horror movies like It's What's Inside, Don't Move, and Time Cut; Anna Kendrick's directorial debut Woman of the Hour; and a full slate of Christmas rom-coms starring Lindsay Lohan, Lacey Chabert, and Christina Milian.
More and more release dates for Netflix movies coming this year have been announced, and below we’ve...
- 8/28/2024
- by Mads Lennon & Reed Gaudens
- Netflix Life
Honestly, your guess is as good as mine why this summer has been so littered with monkeys and apes, going back to Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes in May, stretching through the second season of Hulu’s Hit-Monkey and into the August rush of Apple TV+’s Bad Monkey, Netflix’s Secret Lives of Orangutans and now HBO’s Chimp Crazy.
Is there a sense that we’re on the brink of postapocalyptic decay and we’re prepping for new simian overlords? Did the protracted anxiety of last summer’s dual entertainment industry strikes leave creatives feeling generally dehumanized? Or is it less specific and more general? Are monkeys just too cute for words and do we just want to get squishy with their adorable little almost-human faces and dress them up in cute outfits and take them out to the grocery store in strollers and make one...
Is there a sense that we’re on the brink of postapocalyptic decay and we’re prepping for new simian overlords? Did the protracted anxiety of last summer’s dual entertainment industry strikes leave creatives feeling generally dehumanized? Or is it less specific and more general? Are monkeys just too cute for words and do we just want to get squishy with their adorable little almost-human faces and dress them up in cute outfits and take them out to the grocery store in strollers and make one...
- 8/15/2024
- by Daniel Fienberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
To lift a title from kids’ novelist Wilson Rawls, this has become the Summer of the Monkeys.
Before we get to HBO’s Chimp Crazy and Netflix’s Secret Lives of Orangutans, devotees of the simian arts will be treated to Apple TV+’s Bad Monkey, a Carl Hiaasen adaptation from the streamer’s comedy patron saint, Bill Lawrence (Ted Lasso, Shrinking).
Contrary to the show and novel’s name, the eponymous monkey is not, in fact, bad. Played by veteran animal thespian Crystal — you know her from Community, The Fabelmans and more — she is, in fact, quite good, reliable for reactive cutaways or wild, furry hijinks. She (actually, Crystal is playing a character who seems to identify as male, but we are not going down the path of monkey pronouns here) doesn’t always feel particularly connected to the plot of Bad Monkey, but it’s charming and fun just to have her around.
Before we get to HBO’s Chimp Crazy and Netflix’s Secret Lives of Orangutans, devotees of the simian arts will be treated to Apple TV+’s Bad Monkey, a Carl Hiaasen adaptation from the streamer’s comedy patron saint, Bill Lawrence (Ted Lasso, Shrinking).
Contrary to the show and novel’s name, the eponymous monkey is not, in fact, bad. Played by veteran animal thespian Crystal — you know her from Community, The Fabelmans and more — she is, in fact, quite good, reliable for reactive cutaways or wild, furry hijinks. She (actually, Crystal is playing a character who seems to identify as male, but we are not going down the path of monkey pronouns here) doesn’t always feel particularly connected to the plot of Bad Monkey, but it’s charming and fun just to have her around.
- 8/13/2024
- by Daniel Fienberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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