The images are so jaw-dropping that I think the music is a minor distraction, if that. Having watched the most recent episode, with that remarkable footage of a wolf taking on a bison and the male and female Emperor penguins bring reunited at the end of the Antartctic Winter- just as moving as any Hollywood weepy!!- I think the BBC could even play Berlioz at full pelt and it wouldn't bother me. And that's saying something......
Frozen Planet
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostLike the one with the wolves and the Bison, for example?Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostYou probably mean the part of episode 1 where a herd of Bison were tracked by a wolf pack. In last Wednesday's episode there was a fight to the death between a lone wolf and a single bison. We saw a few minutes of it but it went on for hours. Absolutely incredible.
Sorry - keep forgetting not all of you come from London...
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostYou probably mean the part of episode 1 where a herd of Bison were tracked by a wolf pack. In last Wednesday's episode there was a fight to the death between a lone wolf and a single bison. We saw a few minutes of it but it went on for hours. Absolutely incredible.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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I'm furious ! I was unable to programme last Wednesday's episode due to a clash of interests, but was banking on recording today's repeat, only to find it replaced by bloody motor racing !
A little trade secret. If you ever see footage of fighting reindeer, bear in mind that it isn't usually possible to get close enough to record sound. The trick we used was to go into the studio with a couple of wooden coat hangers - just the job, and fun to fence with !
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Postbear in mind that it isn't usually possible to get close enough to record sound. The trick we used was to go into the studio with a couple of wooden coat hangers
Did I hear Sir D say on last night's programme that the ice at the poles is 4000 metres thick? perhaps I needn't worry about global warming after all.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostI'm furious ! I was unable to programme last Wednesday's episode due to a clash of interests, but was banking on recording today's repeat, only to find it replaced by bloody motor racing !
A little trade secret. If you ever see footage of fighting reindeer, bear in mind that it isn't usually possible to get close enough to record sound. The trick we used was to go into the studio with a couple of wooden coat hangers - just the job, and fun to fence with !
All the episodes of FP are on the 'series catch-up' facility on iPlayer: here's the one you missed (this is the HD version) http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode...Planet_Winter/
Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I've only seen one programme - stunning images, but as others have said, it's nature as soap opera. And the music, while not as intrusive as other DA programmes, is still inappropriate. And for people with hearing difficulties it can make hearing the spoken commentary difficult. This is an issue that comes up time & again in audience feedback to the BBC, but producers dismiss it (as they tend to do with any critiicism of their programmes - just listen to them on 'Feedback' on R4!) Surely with digital TV it would be possible for the music soundtrack to be broadcast seperately, so that it could be switched off?
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostThe mundane aspects of life are left out. (or do people in Manchester really live such dramatic lives? )
Or to put it another way, surely bison don't spend all their time being attacked by wolves - most of the time they must be grazing peacefully.Last edited by ahinton; 01-12-11, 12:18.
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ahinton,
When people visit London Zoo or Whipsnade, they sometimes comment that nothing much seems to be happening. Watching a lion having a snooze while digesting its lunch is the norm, but rather lacking in drama, even if observed in the wild.We have become too accustomed to seeing several entire life cycles condensed into approximately 48 minutes and fifty seconds on TV. What bugs me more is the increasing tendency to invest the animals with a false sense of purpose -- " The mother bear knows that she must find more food , if she and her cubs are to survive " == No, she doesn't!
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostThe mundane aspects of life are left out. (or do people in Manchester really live such dramatic lives? )
Or to put it another way, surely bison don't spend all their time being attacked by wolves - most of the time they must be grazing peacefully.
As for the music obscuring Sir David's narration, I think the levels are very well balanced and I'd be surprised if anybody had trouble making out the words being spoken. If they do, then subtitles have been available for all the episodes.
" The mother bear knows that she must find more food , if she and her cubs are to survive " == No, she doesn't!Last edited by Mr Pee; 01-12-11, 12:10.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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