Originally posted by: mzkhadir
Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: Aharami
Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: mzkhadir
is this the same series that out on dvd, hddvd and bluray ?
http://www.amazon.com/Planet-Earth-Complete-David-Attenborough/dp/B000MR9D5E/
that looks like the UK version
Here is the US version
no, thats the US version. it says "Starring: Sigourney Weaver"
the one i linked is the US version with Sigourney Weaver.
thats weird, on the amazon site it says starring sigourney weaver but in the title it says BBC and even on the page header says BBC with David Attenborough.
in the description is says:
"Original U.K. broadcast version narrated by David Attenborough"
From MSNBC Newsweek:
The Discovery Channel partnered with the BBC to produce "Planet Earth," spending more than $1 million per episode?a fortune in the nature-doc universe. But every penny is on screen. "Every frame had to be a Rembrandt," says executive producer Alastair Fothergill. To paint on screen like grand masters, Fothergill's intrepid team used innovations like the heligimble?a motion-stabilized camera mounted on the belly of a helicopter?to record wild dogs on a hunt, from start to suppertime. Looming overhead, we watch as dogs strategically peel off from the pack to encircle their prey. In another brutally mesmerizing sequence, infrared cameras document a behavior never before captured on film: a pride of lions taking down an elephant in the dead of night.
"Planet Earth" isn't just 11 hours of animals eating each other. Fothergill's cameramen even manage to make thrilling TV out of watching grass grow. Other moments have a quiet majesty, such as rare footage of a Himalayan snow leopard. The animal, says Fothergill, "is the holy grail of wildlife filmmaking." His team whiffed on a pair of eight-week expeditions to find and film the cat, then got a tip that a female was lurking in the remote hills of Pakistan. There was just one problem: rumor had it that Osama bin Laden was lurking there, too. The crew waited a full year for the U.S. Marines to clear out, then went in and, Fothergill says, "got very lucky." Bin Laden. Marines. Snow leopards. Oh my!
Originally posted by: AUMM
Originally posted by: mzkhadir
Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: Aharami
Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: mzkhadir
is this the same series that out on dvd, hddvd and bluray ?
http://www.amazon.com/Planet-Earth-Complete-David-Attenborough/dp/B000MR9D5E/
that looks like the UK version
Here is the US version
no, thats the US version. it says "Starring: Sigourney Weaver"
the one i linked is the US version with Sigourney Weaver.
thats weird, on the amazon site it says starring sigourney weaver but in the title it says BBC and even on the page header says BBC with David Attenborough.
in the description is says:
"Original U.K. broadcast version narrated by David Attenborough"
From MSNBC Newsweek:
The Discovery Channel partnered with the BBC to produce "Planet Earth," spending more than $1 million per episode?a fortune in the nature-doc universe. But every penny is on screen. "Every frame had to be a Rembrandt," says executive producer Alastair Fothergill. To paint on screen like grand masters, Fothergill's intrepid team used innovations like the heligimble?a motion-stabilized camera mounted on the belly of a helicopter?to record wild dogs on a hunt, from start to suppertime. Looming overhead, we watch as dogs strategically peel off from the pack to encircle their prey. In another brutally mesmerizing sequence, infrared cameras document a behavior never before captured on film: a pride of lions taking down an elephant in the dead of night.
"Planet Earth" isn't just 11 hours of animals eating each other. Fothergill's cameramen even manage to make thrilling TV out of watching grass grow. Other moments have a quiet majesty, such as rare footage of a Himalayan snow leopard. The animal, says Fothergill, "is the holy grail of wildlife filmmaking." His team whiffed on a pair of eight-week expeditions to find and film the cat, then got a tip that a female was lurking in the remote hills of Pakistan. There was just one problem: rumor had it that Osama bin Laden was lurking there, too. The crew waited a full year for the U.S. Marines to clear out, then went in and, Fothergill says, "got very lucky." Bin Laden. Marines. Snow leopards. Oh my!
so the BBC one is not as nice as the Discovery edition?
Originally posted by: AUMM
so the BBC one is not as nice as the Discovery edition?
Originally posted by: sdifox
Question to the people in USA, does the US version show BBC logo at all?![]()
Originally posted by: Hubes
Originally posted by: sdifox
Question to the people in USA, does the US version show BBC logo at all?![]()
at the end of the show it showed BBC on it.
And the documentary was amazing. The Pole to Pole was my favorite out of the 3 that aired last night.
Not to mention in HD it just looked amazing. Ill put that planet earth right up to equator.
Originally posted by: Hubes
Originally posted by: sdifox
Question to the people in USA, does the US version show BBC logo at all?![]()
at the end of the show it showed BBC on it.
And the documentary was amazing. The Pole to Pole was my favorite out of the 3 that aired last night.
Not to mention in HD it just looked amazing. Ill put that planet earth right up to equator.
Originally posted by: mzkhadir
it is being shown on the Science Channel tonight.
Originally posted by: Citrix
i saw the first one about the big animals living in the high mountains. to be honest i thought it was pretty boring and i had flash backs to 8th grade biology class when it was film day and we had to watch a documentary.... ZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Originally posted by: 91TTZ
That polar bear just got owned by some walruses. Those tusks are no joke.
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: sdifox
I got all 11 episodes in 720pGalapagos too. Yes, I am in Canada
![]()
mvgroup?
they are awesome
some 8gb 1080i out there too![]()
