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1-21 of 21
- A young mermaid makes a deal with a sea witch to trade her beautiful voice for human legs so she can discover the world above water and impress a prince.
- David Attenborough's legendary BBC crew explains and shows wildlife all over planet earth. From giving an overview of the challenges facing life to hunting the deep sea and various major evolutionary groups of creatures.
- The photographic record of an African expedition led by producer-explorer Armand Denis and his (very) photogenic and camera-toting wife Michaela, who goes bird-riding at an ostrich farm. The expedition ranges from the central interior jungles and mountains to both coasts and as far south as Cape Town, and ends with a gorilla hunt led by natives using 100-year-old muskets. Denis produced and directed with the entire production under the supervision of Jay Bonafield and Douglas Travers, with commentary written by Jerome Brondfield and Burton Benjamin and camerawork credited to Tom Stobart, Phil Scultz, Robert Carmet and Eric White.
- The lively reef fish Shorty, his smart sister Indigo and Jake, a daring sawfish, thrive in a bustling and colorful coral reef.One day, out of nothing, an enormous trawl devastates their reef. Our three heroes survive this cataclysm only with great deal of luck. They are forced to leave their destroyed habitat and go on a search for a new and safe home.
- Oscar-winning documentary based on Rachel L. Carson's pioneering study of ocean life chronicled in her award-winning and best-selling 1951 book of the same name.
- Rick Rosenthal goes on a quest that plumbs the secrets of the legendary bluefin tuna. This fish can weigh up to 1,500 pounds and can move up to 50 miles per hour. Here he catches a bluefin tuna on camera.
- Fogo is a windswept island off the coast of Newfoundland where the inhabitants for generations have lived by, on and from the sea. In this film William Wells, fisherman, and his two sons take a day off from the nets for a journey to the gannet colony on the Funk Islands, fifty miles farther out to sea. There are exceptional close-up views of enormous flocks of seabirds swarming on the cliffs and in the sky.
- Medieval castles, restored manor houses, ancient ruins and sweeping landscape vistas.
- This year long project documents the breeding Season of the Northern Gannet in its entirety and focuses on the beautiful sights and immense sounds of the birds and the changing landscape that surrounds them.
- A 1934 GB production that was picked up in 1937 by Educational for 20th Century Fox distribution about the gannet, (a beautiful white and exceedingly graceful bird deemed the best fisherman in the world), that inhabits a small rocky island off the coast of Wales. One of the few Educational releases that actually was shown in schools, and one would have had to play hookey every day in order to miss seeing this as a Texas school kid in the 40's and 50's. Footage from this short used in many other wild-life films also.
- Describes the ability of birds, insects and bats to fly including migration often over great distances; and how plant seeds defy gravity in order to disperse over a wide area.
- Travelling from Norway to Newfoundland just as seafarers did in A.D. 1,000 to get a sense of how the Vikings lived in the Americas; narrator Ewan MacGregor.
- Wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan leads a team using state-of-the-art cameras, offering a fresh look at the lives of some of the animals in our oceans such as sharks, elephant seals, turtles and gannets.
- South Africa's annual summer sardine migration sees billions of sardines traveling up the coast.
- Steve goes in search of the fastest Deadly Predators on earth. He gets chased down a mountain by a peregrine falcon and high-dives like a gannet off a rugged cliff in Wales.
- Back home in Britain, Steve takes on gannets in a diving competition, comes face-to-face with the only snake that has ever hospitalised him and uncovers a hornets' nest in a loft as he proves that British wildlife is anything but boring.
- Southern Africa annually experience major land - and sea animal migrations. Whales and dolphins arrive, like some prey fish species such as sardines and other fish-eaters, including birds such as gannets, from the polar regions to procreate in hot ocean water. On land, endless trails are made by pasture-changing species such as zebras, followed by their predators, such as great cats. White sharks hunt mainly Atlantic seals.
- Africa and its waters are the scene of major migrations. Seagulls are among the birds who oversee and profit from the arrival of seals and other species on breeding grounds, as in the Cape province. Storks are among the European birds who find warmer refuge in winter. Vultures and many other species find most food along the great savanna trek of wildebeest and other mammals, hunted by the great cats, hyenas, crocodiles. Flamingos are an example of internal African migratory birds.
- 2021TV EpisodeDavid Hayman ends his series exploring Scottish scenery, history and culture with a visit to the North Sea shores of East Lothian.
- Beginning of the journey at the waterfall of Montmorency: Jérôme travels on a zip line near the waterfall: then he meets Yves Cosettte and they make a boat tour on the Saint-Laurent River.Later Jérôme meets in the town of Québec Stéphane Modat and they walk through the old town (Vieux-Québec: Unesco World Heritage site) and the Citadel (the ramparts and the battlefield) and arrive at the Chateau de Frontenac: Stéphane shows him two important places: the beehives (300 kilograms of honey) and the garden with aromatic herbs.On the next day Jérôme meets François Fauck and Philippe Thibault , two professional mushroom pickers and they go to a forest of the "Parc des Laurentides" to pick some mushrooms (the milky cap which has a taste of maple).Later Stéphane prepare for Jérôme piglet meat with pumpkin, apple and mushrooms.After that Jérôme meets in Mont Saint Pierre Jean-Sébastien Cloutier ,a hang gliding coach, they travel to a mountain and have a hang gliding flight over the Gaspésie. Back to Québec Jérôme meets the family of Stéphane: Jassmine Sevigny who manages two sandwich restaurant and and burger resto and their children Lucie and Ludovic: they travel to an apple orchard where they harvest apples (25 kilograms for about 30 Euros): later they go a restaurant and Jérôme tastes a Pogo (sausage) and a poutine (French fries with cheese and bacon). After that Jérôme returns to Gaspésie where he meet Vincent Malouin in a cultural center : they travel to a forest where Vincent has a forest cabin and go fishing in a river. On the next day they go to Percé , a touristic place and travel by boat to see the Roché Percé (an natural arch) and they land at the Bonaventure Island : they have a walk through the island and enjoy the-place full of gannets. Besides we see zooms about the boat captain on the Saint-Laurent river, about Stéphane Maddix Albert the algae collector,about Julie Fournier the artist, about the Quebec French , about the Office Québecois de langue française . about the comedian Louis-Olivier Pelletier, about the brewers in Québec, about about the seaplane pilot Alain Priem, about the story teller and the musicians in Gaspésie, about the hunters and the moose in Quebec.