Reviews

2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
The Life of Mammals (2002–2003)
8/10
worth watching, but ,for many may not hold the same replay value as other "Life of" series
6 January 2006
As with all BBC "Life" series of documentaries the life of mammals contains, and in spades, amazing never seen before footage, an appropriately matching musical score, high production values and the calming, fascinating narrative,and infectious enthusiasm of sir David Attenborough .

All these elements mean some of the best TV has to offer and a benchmark for documentary. Some of the highlights of the series are the never seen before footage of the platypus nest. The Kangaroos giving birth and the elephants salt mining. Yet life of mammals scores, in my book, less than all other Life series.

so what went wrong here? i am afraid old Davy dropped the ball with this one; he has remained respectably fairly neutral on the subject of evolution in his past series, he mentions the facts, why and how animals, plants..etc are behaving, and leaves it up to the audience ,to conclude for themselves ,if its all the result of evolution or intelligent design .

This time around ,he threw the rules and long standing tradition of BBC aside and instead decided to keep regurgitating the still much debated theory of evolution through out each and every single episode in this 10 parts series as if it is a universally agreed upon fact ! And then ends the series with an hour long episode citing the similarities between apes and humans and regurgitates that human's were apes again and again as if it's a universally agreed upon fact . So much, that my uncle, a long time fan of David's work, was rolling his eyes many times during the last 2 episodes.much of the footage in last two episodes highlighting monkeys social nature and behavior is interesting,but clearly the narration was not objective.Rather than wasting time trying to shove evolution down peoples throats, precious time could've been spent showing more rare species and fascinating FACTs about mammals.

This review is not intended to spark a never ending evolution / creation debate, but with all due respect to the BBC and sir David, if you want to make the case of evolution, then make another dedicated show to debate the theory and represent other points of view in a neutral and objective way, the BBC way, or at least the way it used to be. That being said I still feel this series is worth watching, but ,for many may not hold the same replay value as other "Life" series .
8 out of 65 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
good concert DVD,just be prepared to find that few of your favorites didn't make the cut.
31 October 2005
The scale of the concert and fireworks is a sight to behold. The video quality is good but not great, the sound is excellent though and is presented in two flavors:Dolby Digital and 2 Channel stereo.

I am disappointed that many of my favorite tracks didn't make it into this DVD. And I've noticed this on many Jarre video releases; they cut many tracks from the actual show. Nobody expects a live recording to be perfect so why not leave it in there? In terms of extras the DVD contains a documentary titled "making the steam roller fly" which gives a nice background on the early career of Jarre and the Moscow and earlier concerts. There is some very short clips from the 1981 concerts in china, that I've never seen before and it would've been awesome if the they included some tracks from that concert ,or at least more clips ,i would like to see a DVD release of that ground breaking concert as it has some great tracks.

Overall this is a good concert DVD, and I would recommend it to Jarre fans and those interested in electronic music, just be prepared to find that few of your favorites didn't make the cut.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed