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Earth (2007)

Earth (2007)
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As co-directed by Mark Linfield and Alastair Fothergill, the nature documentary Earth represents an edited-down version of the 12-hour small-screen miniseries Planet Earth, reslated for cinematic release. The program provides a sweeping 99-minute tour of our home planet's biosphere -- spanning every level of gaze, from the epic (crystal-clear shots of the Earth hovering in space) to the hyper-specific (a mother polar bear and her cubs waking from a lengthy period of hibernation). The film almost exclusively emphasizes the behavior of the animal populations that inhabit the Earth, yet carefully omits shots that depict the more gory predatory behavior of species, rendering it family-friendly. It also employs a chronological approach -- beginning in January in the Arctic wilderness, and moving progressively through the four seasons and 12 months comprising a single year, until it hits late December -- contrasting various geographic regions of the Earth as shot in various seasons. Above all else, a cautionary message underscores this footage; as in An Inconvenient Truth, the filmmakers continually remind their audience that despite the grandiloquence present onscreen, all may be lost if humankind is not careful. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
James Earl Jones
Director(s):
Mark LinfieldAlastair Fothergill, (more)
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
G
Format(s):
DVD  |  Blu-ray
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Synopsis of Earth

As co-directed by Mark Linfield and Alastair Fothergill, the nature documentary Earth represents an edited-down version of the 12-hour small-screen miniseries Planet Earth, reslated for cinematic release. The program provides a sweeping 99-minute tour of our home planet's biosphere -- spanning every level of gaze, from the epic (crystal-clear shots of the Earth hovering in space) to the hyper-specific (a mother polar bear and her cubs waking from a lengthy period of hibernation). The film almost exclusively emphasizes the behavior of the animal populations that inhabit the Earth, yet carefully omits shots that depict the more gory predatory behavior of species, rendering it family-friendly. It also employs a chronological approach -- beginning in January in the Arctic wilderness, and moving progressively through the four seasons and 12 months comprising a single year, until it hits late December -- contrasting various geographic regions of the Earth as shot in various seasons. Above all else, a cautionary message underscores this footage; as in An Inconvenient Truth, the filmmakers continually remind their audience that despite the grandiloquence present onscreen, all may be lost if humankind is not careful. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
90 mins

Complete Cast of Earth


Director(s):
Mark LinfieldAlastair Fothergill
Writer(s):
Leslie MegaheyMark LinfieldAlastair Fothergill
Producer(s):
Alix TidmarshSophokles Tasioulis
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
G
Categories:
DocumentaryForeign
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Member Reviews
 
Gary G.

If you've just purchased a Blu-Ray player, this should be your 1st Rental/Purchase. The clarity, color, and cinematography throughout this Blu-Ray is just mind-blowing. Especially the waterfalls and the closeups of the animals-just amazing. The narration by James Earl Jones is fantastic, too. My 5 1/2 year old watched it with us and she was riveted. Yeah, the predation scenes where big cats chase down their prey is a little unnerving for a small child, but, if you pause the film, and carefully explain that's the way nature works, a child can work their way through it and come away with a better, real-world experience of the animal kingdom for it. At least that was the case for my 5 1/2 year old girl. Getting back to the film, the time-lapse photography/video footage throughout seasons of time at the same locations was also visual stimulus overload. Try this Blu-Ray out- you'll love it.

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Bill G.

A remarkable production. This is actually a 99 minute compilation of the brilliant series "Planet Earth", which can be rented at BBuster or, of course purchased. Luckily, I have a friend who owns the series and has loaned it to me. If you can't.... see "Earth" for a terrific hour and a half!

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Nancy H.

Remarkable cinematography! The Blu-Ray experience at its best. My ten-year-old granddaughter was saddened, not at the predation, survival of the fittest, but by a polar bear who was unable to find food because of changes in his habitat. I thought it was a brilliant production and hope for more to come.

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