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166 of 167 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully filmed series on terrestrial invertebrates... Excellent DVD
This is a beautiful documentary series. Sir David Attenborough's latest release is a 5-part documentary on terrestrial invertebrates (as opposed to marine invertebrates which are not covered here) with a major emphasis on insects and to a lesser extent, spiders, with a passing glance at snails, slugs and worms which actually only feature in the first episode. While many...
Published on May 31, 2006 by dooby

versus
10 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Insect Documentary, but has a terrible anti-God agenda
The footage about the insect world is truly fascinating. Quite frankly, I wasn't too excited about watching a show about bugs, but through this show gained a much better appreciation of the insect world. Unfortunately, the makers of this documentary couldn't just stick with facts. Instead of just presenting facts they littered the show with the THEORY of evolution,...
Published 7 months ago by dh. Dudley


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166 of 167 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully filmed series on terrestrial invertebrates... Excellent DVD, May 31, 2006
This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
This is a beautiful documentary series. Sir David Attenborough's latest release is a 5-part documentary on terrestrial invertebrates (as opposed to marine invertebrates which are not covered here) with a major emphasis on insects and to a lesser extent, spiders, with a passing glance at snails, slugs and worms which actually only feature in the first episode. While many of the species he showcases can be found in and around your neighbourhood gardens, he still criss-crosses the globe to highlight the diversity of forms and habitats that related species occupy across our planet. He is helped by advances in photography, especially ultra-high-speed photography, microphotography and high-resolution infra-red photography and the new high-definition video which can present it in such spectacular detail on DVD. These highly detailed images are truly gorgeous to look at and make you wish this series was at least twice as long.

The 5 episodes (50 mins each) are:
Ep 1: Invasion of the land - A very brief description of how the invertebrates moved from water to land and the adaptations they underwent during the transition.
Ep 2: Taking to the air - Focusing on insects and their conquest of flight
Ep 3: The Silk Spinners - On invertebrates that make use of silk, including insects but focusing mostly on spiders
Ep 4: Intimate Relations - On symbiotic, parasitic and commensal relationships between various invertebrate species and between invertebrates and plants.
Ep 5: Supersocieties - On insects that form colonies and supercolonies - bees, wasps, ants, termites.

Highlights include the giant centipedes that hunt for bats by catching them in mid-air, 6-foot long giant earthworms in Australia that make so much noise burrowing underground that the earth gurgles beneath your feet, parasitic wasps that inject their eggs into the bodies of caterpillars which proceed to hatch and eat their hosts alive, one species even allowing the caterpillar to pupate only to kill it in the chrysalis and emerge as a fully-formed wasp at the end as if by some act of devilish magic. There's a beautiful sequence taken in Waitomo, New Zealand where the ceiling of a dark cave twinkles with a constellation of blue fairy lights, like stars in the Milky Way. Only on closer inspection do you see that they are the larvae of fungus gnats. There's also a segment on spiders which work in concert (in thousands) to construct 60 foot high webs that form a veritable silken wall across the jungle canopy, trapping insects, birds and well-nigh anything else that fly into them.

The series was shot in 1.78:1 high definition widescreen and is presented as such on DVD (enhanced for widescreen TV). Picture quality is breathtaking. Sound is in 2.0 Stereo with surprisingly good bass extension, notably in the accompanying music. The DVD includes a half-hour long interview with producer Mike Salisbury on the making of the series but unfortunately none with Sir David. It also comes with a separate recording of the complete score by Ben Salisbury and David Poore in 2.0 Stereo, playable separately with 25 individual cueing tracks.

Breathtaking as all this is, it is also a little sad to realise that with this series, David Attenborough has apparently precluded any separate "Life of Insects" series to add to his other "Life Of..." documentaries. Alas, so much to do in so little time. Perhaps we should just count our blessings and be thankful that Sir David has shared so much of his life with us. He has brought home to millions around the world the joy and passion he holds towards all living things on our singularly beautiful living planet. I personally know of many people whose love for the life sciences were sparked by exposure to his inspiring documentaries and books. You could probably go to any corner of the world and be able to find life scientists who hold him in the highest regard and the deepest affection. To think that he is now into his eighties and still hard at work (he reached 80 earlier this month - May 8). A truly remarkable man. He has just premiered his new 2-part documentary on climate change and its effects on wildlife (BBC UK). And he is currently working on the forthcoming "Life of Reptiles". For those interested in learning more about the various creatures featured here, this series comes with Attenborough's beautifully illustrated hardcover book, published by the BBC in the UK and by Princeton in the US.
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50 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most amazing movie about natural history, May 29, 2006
By 
Donat Agosti (Bern, Switzerland) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
This is certainly the best and most exciting movie on invertebrates (and indeed life on Earth) with stunning shots, details on the biology of many species and macrophotography which even I as a specialist haven't seen, and I could not see with my usual equipment. Indeed, almost any sequence has its unprecedented merit from an esthetical point of view, as well as from a scientific.
Rarely in my live, I would be watching movies during my precious business hours. It makes you addicted to invertebrates and their private lives.
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28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My god.., August 3, 2006
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This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
I'm a biology major at Wesleyan University, and I have never, EVER seen a more fair, true and beautifully detailed representation of insect life. This documentary should be seen by everyone, as it would foster much more of an appreciation and respect for the insect life on this planet that outnumbers us by a factor of billions. A must see for anyone and everyone.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellence on a Small Scale, September 9, 2006
This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
David Attenborough is probably the best around when it comes to natural history programs. His other series have always been outstanding whether they deal with birds, mammals, sea creatures, penguins or anything else. Particularly great was his LIFE ON EARTH series. This series is in the same vein of greatness.

Although it is mostly about insects, it is cot completely about insects. The theme is invertebrate life on the land. Due to sheer numbers, that reduces to mostly being about insects but there are some nice asides.

The series is divided into five programs, each with its own theme.

The first deals with the colonization of the land. This program has the most variety in terms of differing types of creatures.

The second deals with the development of flight and looks at the ways insects fly.

The third deals with the making of silk. While this is primarily the domain of spiders, other insects make this remarkable material as well.

The fourth looks at strange relationships between the "bugs" and other bugs or other life. Parasites and symbionts are the order of the day here.

The final show examines the great hive cultures of wasps, bees, ants and termites.

The quality of the ideography is outstanding throughout. Recent advances in lenses and electronics make possible this new view of the small scale world. As with all of Attenborough's work, this is a masterpiece.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Widescreen (1.78:1), not Full Screen (1.33:1) as listed, June 1, 2007
This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
Excellent documentary, using technology to provide macro views of what our naked eye will not be able to catch. These, and some fascinating never-before-seen footages are definitely worth the price IMHO. Video fills widescreen TV fully, i.e aspect of about 1.78:1 not 1.33:1 as listed.

video - ****
audio - ****
contents - *****
rewatch - *****
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great documentary, March 30, 2007
This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
It's a pretty accurate generalization to say any BBC-produced, David Attenborough-narrated documentary will be excellent and this one is. The photography is some of the best I've ever seen and the overall production is second to none.
This is perhaps the best insect/arachnid/myriopod documentary I've ever watched and I really recommend it.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Holy... Freaking... Cow., January 6, 2007
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This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
It was a long time coming. My all-time personal favorite documentary series, "The Blue Planet," has finally been toppled from its throne as King of Nature Films. From the second "Life in the Undergrowth" opens, you'll sit absolutely mesmerized as a gorgeous and wonderfully alien world unfolds before you.

From a ridiculously beautiful shot of a snail's eye to dragonflies filmed in super slow-motion; from bizarre bioluminsecent cave-dwelling grubs to a brutal war waged between a phalanx of African ants and their termite conquests, the five episodes span the history of land-dwelling invertebrates on Earth, each dragging you deeper and deeper into the bizarre microcosm living in the leaf litter in your backyard.

"Life in the Undergrowth" is simply beautiful. There's no other way to phrase it. A film revolving around the tiny multi-legged horrors that creep about largely unseen has no right to be this overwhelmingly pretty, but it is. I sat, jaw agape, through the entire 5 hours on my initial viewing, and have since rewatched the DVDs perhaps 15 times since my purchase.

It's perhaps not as long as I would have liked, nor is the coverage exhaustively comprehensive, but whatever this series may lack in terms of breadth, it more than compensates for with sheer eye-candy.

Buy it, watch it, love it. You will be transfixed.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Life in the Undergrowth., July 2, 2006
By 
M. J. Clough (Naples, Florida, U.S.A.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
Another excellent natural history program from the U.K. and wouldn't you know that David Attenborough would be involved. This set shows us what's around us almost everyday that we don't see. Excellent close up photography, well worth adding to any collection of Attenborough's work. A++++++++
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing, May 20, 2006
By 
Eric (Ankeny, IA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
The remarkable creatures and the beautiful images featured in this series are simply amazing. A must see for anyone with even a passing interest in the natural world.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A new appreciation for bugs and other tiny critters, January 16, 2007
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This review is from: Life in the Undergrowth (DVD)
This will be brief, as the previous reviewer did such a wonderful job of describing the contents. Suffice to say, as a teacher struggling to teach life science in an engaging way to sixth graders for the first time, this series was a godsend. All of us, myself included, were immediately drawn into this brilliantly filmed, delightfully narrated, and fact-filled journey into the world of tiny invertebrates. This DVD is highly recommended for students of all ages. Thank you Sir Attenborough.
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Life in the Undergrowth
Life in the Undergrowth by David Attenborough (DVD - 2006)
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